Currant, Hannah, Hysi, Pirro, Fitzgerald, Tomas W., Gharahkhani, Puya, Bonnemaijer, Pieter W. M., Senabouth, Anne, Hewitt, Alex W., Atan, Denize, Aung, Tin, Charng, Jason, Choquet, Hélène, Craig, Jamie, Khaw, Peng T., Klaver, Caroline C. W., Kubo, Michiaki, Ong, Jue-Sheng, Pasquale, Louis R., Reisman, Charles A., Daniszewski, Maciej, and Powell, Joseph E.
Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) enables non-invasive imaging of the retina and is used to diagnose and manage ophthalmic diseases including glaucoma. We present the first large-scale genome-wide association study of inner retinal morphology using phenotypes derived from OCT images of 31,434 UK Biobank participants. We identify 46 loci associated with thickness of the retinal nerve fibre layer or ganglion cell inner plexiform layer. Only one of these loci has been associated with glaucoma, and despite its clear role as a biomarker for the disease, Mendelian randomisation does not support inner retinal thickness being on the same genetic causal pathway as glaucoma. We extracted overall retinal thickness at the fovea, representative of foveal hypoplasia, with which three of the 46 SNPs were associated. We additionally associate these three loci with visual acuity. In contrast to the Mendelian causes of severe foveal hypoplasia, our results suggest a spectrum of foveal hypoplasia, in part genetically determined, with consequences on visual function. Author summary: The thickness of the inner retinal layers is one of the biomarkers for glaucoma, the leading cause of irreversible blindness globally. Here we utilised the large-scale of the UK Biobank and the images of the retina it contains to look for genetic variants that effect the thickness of the inner retina. We find many variants associated with this variable, but surprisingly only one that also affects glaucoma. Further analysis shows that glaucoma and genetically determined inner retinal thickness are not on the same genetic pathway and it is rather the change of thickness over time that is indicative of the disease. This is important as it invites the potential for the discovered variants to be used as a representation of baseline thickness in the clinic in the future. We also show that foveal hypoplasia, the lack of the normal valley-like shape of the central retina, is present at a population level in a mild form and is affected by three variants that also affect visual acuity. This is an interesting discovery as foveal hypoplasia was previously thought of as an outcome of rare Mendelian disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]