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Incidence, progression and risk factors of age-related macular degeneration in 35–95-year-old individuals from three jointly designed German cohort studies

Authors :
Annette Peters
Robert P Finger
Jeany Q Li
Margit Heier
Teresa Barth
Horst Helbig
Bernhard H F Weber
Martina E Zimmermann
Caroline Brandl
Iris M Heid
Klaus J Stark
Felix Günther
Kathrin I Hartmann
Gregor Eberlein
Thomas W Winkler
Birgit Linkohr
Helmut Küchenhoff
Arthur Mueller
Source :
BMJ Open Ophthalmology, Vol 7, Iss 1 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

Objective To estimate age-related macular degeneration (AMD) incidence/progression across a wide age range.Methods and analysis AMD at baseline and follow-up (colour fundus imaging, Three Continent AMD Consortium Severity Scale, 3CACSS, clinical classification, CC) was assessed for 1513 individuals aged 35–95 years at baseline from three jointly designed population-based cohorts in Germany: Kooperative Gesundheitsforschung in der Region Augsburg (KORA-Fit, KORA-FF4) and Altersbezogene Untersuchungen zur Gesundheit der Universität Regensburg (AugUR) with 18-year, 14-year or 3-year follow-up, respectively. Baseline assessment included lifestyle, metabolic and genetic markers. We derived cumulative estimates, rates and risk factor association for: (1) incident early AMD, (2) incident late AMD among no AMD at baseline (definition 1), (3) incident late AMD among no/early AMD at baseline (definition 2), (4) progression from early to late AMD.Results Incidence/progression increased by age, except progression in 70+-year old. We observed 35–55-year-old with 3CACSS-based early AMD who progressed to late AMD. Predominant risk factor for incident late AMD definition 2 was early AMD followed by genetics and smoking. When separating incident late AMD definition 1 from progression (instead of combined as incident late AMD definition 2), estimates help judge an individual’s risk based on age and (3CACSS) early AMD status: for example, for a 65-year old, 3-year late AMD risk with no or early AMD is 0.5% or 7%, 3-year early AMD risk is 3%; for an 85-year old, these numbers are 0.5%, 21%, 12%, respectively. For CC-based ‘early/intermediate’ AMD, incidence was higher, but progression was lower.Conclusion We provide a practical guide for AMD risk for ophthalmology practice and healthcare management and document a late AMD risk for individuals aged

Subjects

Subjects :
Ophthalmology
RE1-994

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23973269
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open Ophthalmology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.34169ddad7413db0e7d1fb519dcca1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjophth-2021-000912