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Association of serum retinol concentration with normal-tension glaucoma.
- Pang, Ruiqi;
- Feng, Shuo;
- Cao, Kai;
- Sun, Yunxiao;
- Guo, Yiqin;
- Ma, Dandan;
- Pang, Chi;
- Liu, Xiangyi;
- Qian, Jingyu;
- Xie, Yuan;
- Shi, Yan;
- He, Hailong;
- Peng, Jun;
- Chen, Congyan;
- Cui, Jing;
- Labisi, Siloka;
- Zhang, Yue;
- Fu, Yingdi;
- Li, Jiaying;
- Wan, Yue;
- Xin, Chen;
- Liu, Hanruo;
- Zhang, Qing;
- Wang, Huaizhou;
- Wang, Ningli;
- Weinreb, Robert
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41433-021-01740-6Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the association between serum retinol concentration and normal-tension glaucoma (NTG). METHODS: A total of 345 study subjects were recruited in a prospective cross-sectional study: 101 patients with NTG, 106 patients with high-pressure primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and 138 healthy control subjects. Serum retinol concentration in fasting blood samples was determined by ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS). All study subjects were given complete ophthalmic examinations and diagnosed by two glaucoma sub-specialists. RESULTS: Serum retinol concentrations in NTG, POAG, and controls were 338.90 ± 103.23 ng/mL, 405.22 ± 114.12 ng/mL, and 408.84 ± 122.36 ng/mL respectively. NTG patients had lower serum retinol concentrations than POAG (p < 0.001) or healthy controls (p < 0.001). There was no statistical difference between the POAG and healthy controls (p = 0.780). Higher proportion of NTG patients (37.6%) than POAG (17.9%) or controls (21.7%) had serum retinol concentrations lower than 300 ng/mL. Serum retinol was positively correlated with optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) (r = 0.349, p = 0.001) in glaucoma patients and not associated with any other demographic features or ophthalmic biometric parameters in the NTG patients. Multivariate logistic regression showed that serum retinol (OR = 0.898, 95CI%: 0.851-0.947) was associated with incident NTG. CONCLUSIONS: NTG patients had lower serum retinol concentrations. Serum retinol uniquely associated with NTG makes it a new potential option for the diagnosis and treatment of the disease.
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