Doheny Eye Institute and the Department of Ophthalmology, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Ophthalmology. 2011 Sep;118(9):1790-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2011.02.002. Epub 2011 Jul 23.
To identify independent risk factors for incident visual impairment (VI) and monocular blindness.
Population-based prospective cohort study.
A total of 4658 Latinos aged 40 years in the Los Angeles Latino Eye Study (LALES).
A detailed history and comprehensive ophthalmologic examination was performed at baseline and at the 4-year follow-up on 4658 Latinos aged ≥40 years from Los Angeles, California. Incident VI was defined as best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) of <20/40 and >20/200 in the better-seeing eye at the 4-year follow-up examination in persons who had a BCVA of ≥20/40 in the better-seeing eye at baseline. Incident monocular blindness was defined as BCVA of ≤20/200 in 1 eye at follow-up in persons who had a BCVA >20/200 in both eyes at baseline. Sociodemographic and clinical risk factors identified at the baseline interview and examination and associated with incident VI and loss of vision were determined using multivariable regression. Odds ratios (ORs) were calculated for those variables that were independently associated with VI and monocular blindness.
Odds ratios for various risk factors for incident VI and monocular blindness.
Independent risk factors for incident VI were older age (70-79 years, OR 4.8; ≥80 years OR 17.9), unemployment (OR 3.5), and diabetes mellitus (OR 2.2). Independent risk factors for monocular blindness were being retired (OR 3.4) or widowed (OR 3.7) and having diabetes mellitus (OR 2.1) or any ocular disease (OR 5.6) at baseline. Persons with self-reported excellent/good vision were less likely to develop VI or monocular blindness (OR 0.4-0.5).
Our data highlight that older Latinos and Latinos with diabetes mellitus or self-reported eye diseases are at high risk of developing vision loss. Furthermore, being unemployed, widowed, or retired confers an independent risk of monocular blindness. Interventions that prevent, treat, and focus on the modifiable factors may reduce the burden of vision loss in this fastest growing segment of the US population.
确定导致新发视力损害(VI)和单眼盲的独立风险因素。
基于人群的前瞻性队列研究。
共纳入来自加利福尼亚州洛杉矶的 4658 名年龄在 40 岁及以上的拉丁裔人群(LALES)。
在基线和 4 年随访时,对来自加利福尼亚州洛杉矶的 4658 名年龄≥40 岁的拉丁裔人群进行详细的病史询问和全面的眼科检查。新发 VI 定义为:在基线时最佳矫正视力(BCVA)≥20/40 且≤20/200 的较好眼,在 4 年随访时 BCVA<20/40;新发单眼盲定义为:在基线时双眼 BCVA>20/200 的情况下,随访时单眼 BCVA≤20/200。使用多变量回归分析确定基线访谈和检查中确定的与新发 VI 和视力丧失相关的社会人口统计学和临床风险因素,并确定与 VI 和单眼盲相关的独立风险因素。计算了这些变量与 VI 和单眼盲相关的比值比(ORs)。
各种新发 VI 和单眼盲风险因素的比值比。
新发 VI 的独立危险因素为年龄较大(70-79 岁,OR 4.8;≥80 岁,OR 17.9)、失业(OR 3.5)和糖尿病(OR 2.2)。单眼盲的独立危险因素为退休(OR 3.4)或丧偶(OR 3.7)、基线时患有糖尿病(OR 2.1)或任何眼部疾病(OR 5.6)。自我报告视力良好/优秀的人群新发 VI 或单眼盲的可能性较小(OR 0.4-0.5)。
我们的数据表明,年龄较大的拉丁裔人群和患有糖尿病或自我报告眼病的拉丁裔人群发生视力丧失的风险较高。此外,失业、丧偶或退休会增加单眼盲的风险。预防、治疗和关注可改变的因素的干预措施可能会降低美国这一增长最快的人群中视力丧失的负担。