Older age was significantly associated with narrower central retinal arteriolar diameter equivalents (estimate -0.52) and venular diameter equivalents in a healthy cohort.
Cross-Sectional (n=277)
Single-blind
No
Establishing normative data for static and dynamic retinal vessel analysis demonstrates that older age and higher blood pressure correlate with narrower retinal arterioles, supporting its use as a non-invasive biomarker for cardiovascular risk stratification.
Effect estimate: estimate -0.52 (95% CI -0.61 to -0.43)
p-value: p=<0.001
Retinal vessel phenotype is predictive for cardiovascular outcome. This cross-sectional population-based study aimed to quantify normative data and standard operating procedures for static and dynamic retinal vessel analysis. We analysed central retinal arteriolar (CRAE) and venular (CRVE) diameter equivalents, as well as retinal endothelial function, measured by flicker light-induced maximal arteriolar (aFID) and venular (vFID) dilatation. Measurements were performed in 277 healthy individuals aged 20 to 82 years of the COmPLETE study. The mean range from the youngest compared to the oldest decade was 196 ± 13 to 166 ± 17 µm for CRAE, 220 ± 15 to 199 ± 16 µm for CRVE, 3.74 ± 2.17 to 3.79 ± 2.43% for aFID and 4.64 ± 1.85 to 3.86 ± 1.56% for vFID. Lower CRAE estimate (95% CI): - 0.52 (- 0.61 to - 0.43), CRVE - 0.33 (- 0.43 to - 0.24) and vFID - 0.01 (- 0.26 to - 0.00), but not aFID, were significantly associated with older age. Interestingly, higher blood pressure was associated with narrower CRAE - 0.82 (- 1.00 to - 0.63) but higher aFID 0.05 (0.03 to 0.07). Likewise, narrower CRAE were associated with a higher predicted aFID - 0.02 (- 0.37 to - 0.01). We recommend use of defined standardized operating procedures and cardiovascular risk stratification based on normative data to allow for clinical implementation of retinal vessel analysis in a personalized medicine approach.
Streese et al. (Thu,) conducted a cross-sectional in Healthy individuals (normative data for cardiovascular risk biomarker) (n=277). Older age vs. Younger age was evaluated on Central retinal arteriolar diameter equivalents (CRAE) (estimate -0.52, 95% CI -0.61 to -0.43, p=<0.001). Older age was significantly associated with narrower central retinal arteriolar diameter equivalents (estimate -0.52) and venular diameter equivalents in a healthy cohort.