Abstract
Diabetic
eye disease refers to a group of eye complications that occur in diabetic
patients and include diabetic retinopathy, diabetic macular edema, diabetic
cataracts, and diabetic glaucoma. However, the global epidemiology of these
conditions has not been well characterized. In this study, we collected
information on diabetic eye disease-related research grants from seven
representative countries––the United States, China, Japan, the United Kingdom,
Spain, Germany, and France––by searching for all global diabetic eye disease
journal articles in the Web of Science and PubMed databases, all global
registered clinical trials in the ClinicalTrials database, and new drugs
approved by the United States, China, Japan, and EU agencies from 2012 to 2021.
During this time period, diabetic retinopathy accounted for the vast majority
(89.53%) of the 2288 government research grants that were funded to investigate
diabetic eye disease, followed by diabetic macular edema (9.27%). The United
States granted the most research funding for diabetic eye disease out of the
seven countries assessed. The research objectives of grants focusing on
diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema differed by country.
Additionally, the United States was dominant in terms of research output,
publishing 17.53% of global papers about diabetic eye disease and receiving
22.58% of total citations. The United States and the United Kingdom led
international collaborations in research into diabetic eye disease. Of the 415
clinical trials that we identified, diabetic macular edema was the major
disease that was targeted for drug development (58.19%). Approximately half of
the trials (49.13%) pertained to angiogenesis. However, few drugs were approved
for ophthalmic (40 out of 1830; 2.19%) and diabetic eye disease (3 out of 1830;
0.02%) applications. Our findings show that basic and translational research
related to diabetic eye disease in the past decade has not been highly active,
and has yielded few new treatment methods and newly approved drugs.