| Dietary Fat and Risk for Advanced Age-Related
Macular Degeneration
Johanna M. Seddon, MD; Bernard Rosner, PhD; Robert D.
Sperduto, MD; Lawrence Yannuzzi, MD; Julia A. Haller,
MD; Norman P. Blair, MD; Walter Willett, MD
Objective: To evaluate the relationship between intake
of total and specific types of fat and risk for advanced
age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading
cause of irreversible blindness in adults.
Design: A multicenter eye disease case-control study.
Setting: Five US clinical ophthalmology centers.
Patients: Case subjects included 349 individuals (age
range, 55-80 years) with the advanced, neovascular stage
of AMD diagnosed within 1 year of their enrollment into
the study who resided near a participating clinical
center. Control subjects included 504 individuals without
AMD but with other ocular diseases. Controls were from
the same geographic areas as cases and were frequency-matched
to cases by age and sex.
Main Outcome: Measures Relative risk for AMD according
to level of fat intake, controlling for cigarette smoking
and other risk factors.
Results: Higher vegetable fat consumption was associated
with an elevated risk for AMD. After adjusting for age,
sex, education, cigarette smoking, and other risk factors,
the odds ratio (OR) was 2.22 (95% confidence interval
[CI], 1.32-3.74) for persons in the highest vs those
in the lowest quintiles of intake (P for trend, .007).
The risk for AMD was also significantly elevated for
the highest Vs lowest quintiles of intake of monounsaturated
(OR, 1.71) and polyunsaturated (OR, 1.86) fats (Ps for
trend, .03 and .03, respectively). Higher consumption
of linoleic acid was also associated with a higher risk
for AMD (P for trend, .02). Higher intake of -3 fatty
acids was associated with a lower risk for AMD among
individuals consuming diets low in linoleic acid, an
-6 fatty acid (P for trend, .05; P for continuous variable,
.03). Similarly, higher frequency of fish intake tended
to reduce risk for AMD when the diet was low in linoleic
acid (P for trend, .05). Conversely, neither -3 fatty
acids nor fish intake were related to risk for AMD among
people with high levels of linoleic acid intake.
Conclusion: Higher intake of specific types of fat
including vegetable, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated
fats and linoleic acid rather than total fat intake
may be associated with a greater risk for advanced AMD.
Diets high in -3 fatty acids and fish were inversely
associated with risk for AMD when intake of linoleic
acid was low.
Arch Ophthalmol. 2001;119:1191-1199
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food
and Drug Administration.
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