Impact of incident age-related macular degeneration and associated vision loss on vision-related quality of life

Author:

Man Ryan Eyn KiddORCID,Gan Alfred Tau Liang,Fenwick Eva KORCID,Teo Kelvin Yi Chong,Tan Anna C S,Cheung Gemmy Chui MingORCID,Teo Zhen LingORCID,Kumari Neelam,Wong Tien YinORCID,Cheng Ching-YuORCID,Lamoureux Ecosse LucORCID

Abstract

BackgroundWe examined the associations between the 6-year incidence of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and vision-related quality of life (VRQoL), and the contribution of presenting visual acuity (VA), in an Asian population.MethodsFundus images from the Singapore Chinese Eye Study, a population-based cohort study (baseline: 2009–2011; follow-up: 2015–2017), were graded using a modified Wisconsin age-related maculopathy grading system. Incident AMD was defined as no baseline AMD in both eyes and early/late AMD in the worse eye at follow-up. Presenting VA was assessed using the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution chart at 4 m under standard lighting conditions with habitual correction. Multiple linear regression models determined the associations between AMD incidence with changes in the Rasch-transformed scores of the Reading, Mobility and Emotional VRQoL domains of the 32-item Impact of Visual Impairment (IVI-32) questionnaire, adjusted for traditional confounders. The contribution of presenting VA to changes in VRQoL was also estimated.ResultsOf the 2251 participants without AMD at baseline (mean age (SD): 57.7 (9) years, 51.4% women), 101 (4.5%) and 11 (0.5%) developed incident early and late AMD at follow-up, respectively. Incident late AMD was associated with significant 30.3%, 32.5% and 30.9% decrements in Reading, Mobility and Emotional IVI scores, respectively. The contribution of presenting VA ranged between 1.62% and 4.35% of the observed decrements. No significant associations were noted with incident early AMD.ConclusionIncident late AMD had a substantial impact on all aspects of VRQoL, with presenting VA contributing only minimally to this longitudinal relationship.

Funder

NMRC Transition Award

Biomedical Research Council

Singapore Ministry of Health’s National Medical Research Council

National Medical Research Council (NMRC) Senior-Clinician Scientist Awards

Singapore Bio Imaging Consortium

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Sensory Systems,Ophthalmology

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