Age-Related Macular Degeneration and Quality of Life in Latinos: The Los Angeles Latino Eye Study.

PubMed ID: 27124819

Author(s): Choudhury F, Varma R, Klein R, Gauderman WJ, Azen SP, McKean-Cowdin R; Los Angeles Latino Eye Study Group. age-related macular degeneration and quality of life in Latinos: The Los Angeles Latino Eye Study. JAMA Ophthalmol. 2016 Jun 1;134(6):683-90. doi: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2016.0794. PMID 27124819

Journal: Jama Ophthalmology, Volume 134, Issue 6, Jun 2016

IMPORTANCE This study found evidence of a threshold effect in which the presence of bilateral soft drusen and depigmentation of retinal pigment epithelium was associated with substantially low health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adult Latinos from the United States.

OBJECTIVE To assess the association of general and vision-specific HRQoL with age-related macular degeneration (AMD), overall and by bilaterality and severity, in adult Latinos.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This cross-sectional, population-based study included 4876 participants from the general urban community in 6 US Census tracts in La Puente, California. The data for these analyses were collected as part of a population-based study of ocular diseases in adult Latinos in the Los Angeles Latino Eye Study from February 1, 2000, through May 31, 2003. The analysis was performed from November 2010 to February 2011. Additional analyses were performed in June 2014.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Mean-adjusted HRQoL scores and effect sizes.

RESULTS Of the 4876 participants included in the analysis, 4402 (90.3%) had no AMD, and 474 (9.7%) had any AMD, with 453 having early (9.3%) and 21 (0.4%) having late stages of the disease. The mean (SD) age of the cohort was 54.8 (10.7) years. Of the 4876 participants, 2001 (41.0%) were male and 2875 (59.0%) were female. In this cohort of Latinos, participants with AMD had lower vision-specific HRQoL scores. General HRQoL was assessed by the Medical Outcomes Study 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey and self-reported vision-related HRQoL by the National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire 25 (NEI-VFQ-25). Composite NEI-VFQ-25 scores were 59.5 (95% CI, 50.8-68.1) for those with late-stage AMD and 79.4 (95% CI, 72.5-86.1) for those with early-stage AMD, compared with participants without AMD 80.7 (95% CI, 73.9-82.4); P 125 μm in diameter with drusen area ≥196 350 μm2) and depigmentation of retinal pigment epithelium (slope of -19.17 for the NEI-VFQ-25 composite score). Measures of general health, as assessed by the Medical Outcomes Study 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey, were not affected in this cohort.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this study of adult Latinos, early AMD lesions are associated with lower self-reported, vision-specific HRQoL but not general HRQoL. Severity and bilaterality of AMD are associated with measurably lower HRQoL scores, with the largest difference in scores occurring for individuals with both eyes affected. A concatenated approach to incorporate bilateral severity might be more useful and provide better insight into the association of AMD and HRQoL.