PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Small hard drusen and associated factors in early seniority.

  • Mohamed Belmouhand,
  • Simon P Rothenbuehler,
  • Sami Dabbah,
  • Jakob Bjerager,
  • Birgit Sander,
  • Jacob B Hjelmborg,
  • Christine Dalgård,
  • Rasmus Jensen,
  • Michael Larsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279279
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
p. e0279279

Abstract

Read online

PurposeThe purpose of this study was to examine the ocular and systemic risk profile of the fundus phenotype ≥ 20 small hard (macular) drusen (MethodsThis single-center, cross-sectional study of 176 same-sex twin pairs aged 30 to 80 (median 60) years was a component of a framework study of the transition from not having age-related macular degeneration to having early AMD. Drusen categories assessed using fundus photography and optical coherence tomography included small hard drusen (diameter 125 μm), of which the soft drusen are compatible with a diagnosis of AMD.ResultsHaving ≥ 20 small hard drusen within or outside the macula was associated with increasing age, lower body mass index, shorter axial length, hyperopia, female sex, increasing high-density lipoprotein (HDL), high alcohol consumption, and with the presence of soft drusen.ConclusionsHaving ≥ 20 small hard drusen was associated with some AMD-related risk factors, but not with smoking, increasing body mass index, and higher blood pressure. Having ≥ 20 small hard drusen was also associated with soft drusen, in agreement with previous studies. These findings suggest that small hard drusen are not an early manifestation of AMD but the product of a distinct process of tissue alteration that promotes the development of AMD or some subtype thereof.