Ganglion cell layer thickening in well-controlled patients with type 1 diabetes: an early sign for diabetic retinopathy?

February 27, 2026
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AUTHORS

Bianca S Gerendas, Katja Hatz, Alexandra Kaider, Henryk Zulewski, Roger Lehmann, Alessio Montuoro, Ursula Schmidt-Erfurth, Christian Pruente

Acta Ophthalmol. 2020 May;98(3):e292-e300. doi: 10.1111/aos.14273. Epub 2019 Oct 25.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate early changes in retinal layers using optical coherence tomography (OCT) in patients with long-standing type 1 diabetes (DM1) receiving intensified insulin therapy.

METHODS: In a cross-sectional case-control study 150 patients with DM1 and 150 age- and sex-matched healthy control participants underwent OCT imaging. Scans of both eyes were analysed for different layers (NFL, GCL (+IPL), INL, outer layer complex (OLC, including OPL, ONL and ELM) and photoreceptors (PR)) in all subfields of an ETDRS grid. All analyses were performed semi-automatically using custom software by certified graders of the Vienna Reading Center. ANOVA models were used to compare the mean thickness of the layers between patients and controls.

RESULTS: Six hundred eyes with 512 datapoints in 49 b-scans in each OCT were analysed. Mean thickness in patients/controls was 31.35 μm/30.65 μm (NFL, p = 0.0347), 76.7 μm/73.15 μm (GCL, p ≤ 0.0001), 36.29 μm/37.13 μm (INL, p = 0.0116), 114.34 μm/112.02 μm (OLC, p < 0.0001) and 44.71 μm/44.69 μm (PR, p = 0.9401). When evaluating the ETDRS subfields separately for clinically meaningful hypotheses, a significant swelling of the GCL in patients could be found uniformly and a central swelling for the OLC, whereas the distribution of NFL and INL thickening suggests that their statistical significance was not clinically relevant.

CONCLUSION: These preliminary results demonstrate that preclinical retinal changes in patients with long-standing DM1 can be found by retinal layer evaluation. However, the changes are layer-specific, with significant thickening of the GCL and less so of the OLC suggesting a role as an early sign for diffuse swelling and the evolution of DME even in well-controlled diabetes.

PMID:31654495 | PMC:PMC7216836 | DOI:10.1111/aos.14273

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