Institute for Sociology and Demography, University of Rostock, Rostock, Germany.
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Bonn, Germany.
PLoS One. 2021 May 3;16(5):e0251018. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251018. eCollection 2021.
This study aims to estimate the incidence of severe binocular vision impairment and blindness (SVI/B) and to identify eye diseases and regional risk factors of persons with SVI/B at ages 50 years and older.
We designed an observational cohort study based on longitudinal, multifactorial, and administrative information of a random sample of 250,000 persons at ages 50+. All individuals were included in the process-produced health claims register of the Allgemeine Ortskrankenkasse in 2004, and were followed until 2015. We analyzed ten selected eye diseases and regional characteristics as risk factors for SVI/B using Cox models, adjusting for demographic characteristics and multi-morbidity.
The age-standardized incidence was 79 new diagnoses of SVI/B per 100,000 person-years (95%-CI: 76-82); 77 for males (72-82) and 81 for females (77-85). By adjusting for multiple factors, the model revealed and confirmed that individuals who were very old (Hazard ratio90+: 6.67; 3.59-12.71), male (1.18; 1.01-1.38), had multi-morbidities (three+ diseases: 3.36; 2.51-4.49), or had diabetes (1.26; 1.07-1.49) had an increased risk of SVI/B. Compared to persons without the particular eye disease (all p<0.001), persons diagnosed with secondary glaucoma had a multiple-adjusted 4.66 times (3.17-6.85) higher risk, those with retinal vascular occlusion had a 4.51 times (3.27-6.23) higher risk, and those with angle-closure glaucoma had a 4.22 times (2.60-6.85) higher risk. Population density was not a risk factor, while persons living in wealthier regions had 0.75 times (p=0.003) to 0.70 times (p<0.001) the risk of SVI/B than persons in the least wealthy regions of Germany.
The study revealed and confirmed some profound risk factors of SVI/B at both the individual and the macro level. The sizes of the effects of the characteristics of the living context were smaller than those of the individual characteristics, especially for some severe eye diseases. While urbanity and access to health services had no effect, regional economic wealth was a risk factor for SVI/B. Future health care measures and advice by physicians should take these dimensions of inequalities in SVI/B into account.
本研究旨在评估 50 岁及以上人群中严重双眼视力障碍和盲(SVI/B)的发病率,并确定 SVI/B 患者的眼病和区域风险因素。
我们设计了一项基于观察性队列研究,对 25 万 50 岁以上人群的纵向、多因素和行政信息进行了随机抽样。所有参与者均在 2004 年纳入按程序生成的健康索赔登记册,并随访至 2015 年。我们使用 Cox 模型分析了十种选定的眼病和区域特征作为 SVI/B 的风险因素,调整了人口统计学特征和多种合并症。
年龄标准化发病率为每 100,000 人年 79 例新诊断的 SVI/B(95%CI:76-82);男性 77 例(72-82),女性 81 例(77-85)。通过调整多种因素,模型揭示并证实,非常年老的个体(Hazard ratio90+:6.67;3.59-12.71)、男性(1.18;1.01-1.38)、患有多种合并症(三种以上疾病:3.36;2.51-4.49)或患有糖尿病(1.26;1.07-1.49)的个体发生 SVI/B 的风险增加。与没有特定眼病的个体相比(均 p<0.001),诊断为继发性青光眼的个体风险调整后危险比为 4.66 倍(3.17-6.85),视网膜血管闭塞为 4.51 倍(3.27-6.23),闭角型青光眼为 4.22 倍(2.60-6.85)。人口密度不是一个风险因素,而居住在较富裕地区的个体发生 SVI/B 的风险比德国最贫困地区的个体低 0.75 倍(p=0.003)至 0.70 倍(p<0.001)。
该研究在个体和宏观层面上揭示并证实了一些严重 SVI/B 的重要风险因素。生活环境特征的影响大小小于个体特征的影响大小,尤其是对于一些严重眼病。虽然城市化和获得卫生服务没有影响,但区域经济财富是 SVI/B 的一个风险因素。未来的医疗保健措施和医生的建议应考虑 SVI/B 中这些不平等维度。