Chiu Chung-Jung, Milton Roy C, Gensler Gary, Taylor Allen
Jean Mayer US Department of Agriculture, Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2007 Jul;86(1):180-8. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/86.1.180.
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the major cause of irreversible blindness. AMD appears to share several carbohydrate-related mechanisms and risk factors with diabetes-related diseases, including retinopathy and cardiovascular disease (CVD); however, to date, only one small study has addressed this issue.
The objective was to test the hypothesis that dietary glycemic index (dGI), which has been related to the risk of diabetes and CVD, is associated with the risk and severity of AMD in nondiabetic elderly populations.
Dietary information was obtained from 4099 participants aged 55-80 y (56% women) in the Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS). A total of 8125 eligible eyes at baseline were classified into 1 of 5 AMD groups according to the size and extent of drusen, the presence of geographic atrophy, and neovascular changes. We used a generalized estimating approach to evaluate the relations between dGI and risk and severity of AMD with eyes as the unit of analysis.
Compared with eyes in the first quintile of dGI, eyes in the fourth and fifth quintiles had a significantly or suggestively higher risk of large drusen, geographic atrophy, and neovascularization. The multivariate-adjusted odds ratios (95% CIs) for the highest quintile were 1.42 (1.09, 1.84), 1.78 (0.81, 3.90), and 1.41 (0.95, 2.08), respectively, of which only the odds ratio for large drusen was significant. A significant positive relation between dGI and severity of AMD was also noted (P for trend < 0.001). There was a 49% increase in the risk of advanced AMD (geographic atrophy plus neovascularization) for persons with a dGI higher than the sex median (women: >or=77.9; men: >or=79.3). This result indicated that 20% of prevalent cases of AMD would have been eliminated if the AREDS participants consumed diets with a dGI below the median.
The association between dGI and AMD from the AREDS cross-sectional analysis at baseline suggests that a reduction in the dGI, a modifiable risk factor, may provide a means of diminishing the risk of AMD.
年龄相关性黄斑变性(AMD)是不可逆失明的主要原因。AMD似乎与糖尿病相关疾病(包括视网膜病变和心血管疾病(CVD))有一些与碳水化合物相关的机制和风险因素相同;然而,迄今为止,只有一项小型研究探讨了这个问题。
目的是检验以下假设:与糖尿病和CVD风险相关的饮食血糖指数(dGI)与非糖尿病老年人群中AMD的风险和严重程度相关。
从年龄相关性眼病研究(AREDS)中4099名年龄在55 - 80岁(女性占56%)的参与者那里获取饮食信息。根据玻璃膜疣的大小和范围、地图样萎缩的存在以及新生血管变化,在基线时总共8125只符合条件的眼睛被分为5个AMD组中的1组。我们使用广义估计方法,以眼睛作为分析单位来评估dGI与AMD风险和严重程度之间的关系。
与dGI第一五分位数的眼睛相比,第四和第五五分位数的眼睛出现大玻璃膜疣、地图样萎缩和新生血管形成的风险显著或有提示性地更高。最高五分位数的多变量调整优势比(95%置信区间)分别为1.42(1.09,1.84)、1.78(0.81,3.90)和1.41(0.95,2.08),其中只有大玻璃膜疣的优势比具有显著性。还注意到dGI与AMD严重程度之间存在显著的正相关(趋势P < 0.001)。对于dGI高于性别中位数(女性:≥77.9;男性:≥79.3)的人,晚期AMD(地图样萎缩加新生血管形成)的风险增加了49%。这一结果表明,如果AREDS参与者食用dGI低于中位数的饮食,20%的AMD现患病例本可避免。
基线时AREDS横断面分析中dGI与AMD之间的关联表明,降低dGI(一个可改变的风险因素)可能提供一种降低AMD风险的方法。