Publications by authors named "Jeremy Guggenheim"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how lifestyle risk factors like time outdoors, reading habits, and sleep duration affect the prevalence of myopia (nearsightedness) in children, finding that traditional methods may downplay these effects.
  • Using instrumental variable (IV) methods in a sample of over 5,000 children, researchers discovered that spending more time outdoors significantly reduces myopia risk, while increased reading time is linked to a higher risk of myopia.
  • The findings suggest that previous studies may have significantly underestimated the impact of lifestyle factors on myopia development.
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The etiology of primary open angle glaucoma is constituted by both intraocular pressure-dependent and intraocular pressure-independent mechanisms. However, GWASs of traits affecting primary open angle glaucoma through mechanisms independent of intraocular pressure remains limited. Here, we address this gap by subtracting the genetic effects of a GWAS for intraocular pressure from a GWAS for primary open angle glaucoma to reveal the genetic contribution to primary open angle glaucoma via intraocular pressure-independent mechanisms.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study aimed to create a comprehensive consensus on managing myopia in children and young people across the UK and Ireland through a Delphi method involving 34 expert optometrists and ophthalmologists.
  • The panel agreed on 131 statements, emphasizing the need for parental discussions on interventions for myopia developed before age 13, publicly funded options for those at risk, and the consideration of individual hobbies and lifestyles in choosing treatment.
  • Future research is essential to better identify at-risk patients, assess the effectiveness of treatments, and adapt management strategies as new evidence arises.
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Article Synopsis
  • - Myopia is becoming more prevalent among young people globally, posing a risk of serious vision impairment in the future, which makes effective treatment options essential
  • - Advances in understanding myopia's causes and management techniques are rapid, yet significant information gaps hinder the development of comprehensive intervention plans
  • - An algorithm has been proposed to guide eye care providers in creating individualized myopia management strategies, integrating the latest research and various preventive and intervention methods
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate if education contributes to the risk of myopia because educational activities typically occur indoors or because of other factors, such as prolonged near viewing.

Methods: This was a two-sample Mendelian randomization study. Participants were from the UK Biobank, Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, and Generation R.

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Purpose: Changes in refractive error during young adulthood is common yet risk factors at this age are largely unexplored. This study explored risk factors for these changes, including gene-environmental interactions.

Methods: Spherical equivalent refraction (SER) and axial length (AL) for 624 community-based adults were measured at 20 (baseline) and 28 years old.

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Long axial length (AL) is a risk factor for myopia. Although family studies indicate that AL has an important genetic component with heritability estimates up to 0.94, there have been few reports of AL-associated loci.

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Background: High myopia (HM), defined as a spherical equivalent refractive error (SER) ≤ -6.00 diopters (D), is a leading cause of sight impairment, through myopic macular degeneration (MMD). We aimed to derive an improved polygenic score (PGS) for predicting children at risk of HM and to test if a PGS is predictive of MMD after accounting for SER.

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Myopia most often develops during school age, with the highest incidence in countries with intensive education systems. Interactions between genetic variants and educational exposure are hypothesized to confer susceptibility to myopia, but few such interactions have been identified. Here, we aimed to identify genetic variants that interact with education level to confer susceptibility to myopia.

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Purpose: Genetic variants identified through population-based genome-wide studies are generally of high frequency, exerting their action in the central part of the refractive error spectrum. However, the power to identify associations with variants of lower minor allele frequency is greatly reduced, requiring considerable sample sizes. Here we aim to assess the impact of rare variants on genetic variation of refractive errors in a very large general population cohort.

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Purpose: Myopia is associated with an increased risk of permanent vision loss. The caffeine metabolite 7-methylxanthine (7-MX), licensed in Denmark since 2009 as a treatment to reduce the rate of childhood myopia progression, is the only orally administered therapy available. The purpose of the current study was to assess the rate of myopia progression in children taking 7-MX.

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Purpose: To test for causality with regard to the association between blood pressure (BP) and intraocular pressure (IOP) and glaucoma.

Methods: Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with BP were identified in a genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis of 526,001 participants of European ancestry. These SNPs were used to assess the BP versus IOP relationship in a distinct sample (n = 70,832) whose corneal-compensated IOP (IOPcc) was measured.

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Parents pass on both their genes and environment to offspring, prompting debate about the relative importance of nature versus nurture in the inheritance of complex traits. Advances in molecular genetics now make it possible to quantify an individual's genetic predisposition to a trait via his or her 'polygenic score'. However, part of the risk captured by an individual's polygenic score may actually be attributed to the genotype of their parents.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The research tested thousands of genetic variants, resulting in the discovery of 19 potential causal variants, including 12 that were previously unknown, linked to different types of refractive error (myopic and hyperopic).
  • * Additionally, the study found two new candidate genes (COL4A4 and ATM) associated with refractive errors, but it pointed out some limitations of the study approach compared to focused case-control studies for high myopia.
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Importance: Myopia incidence and progression has been described extensively in children. However, few data exist regarding myopia incidence and progression in early adulthood.

Objective: To describe the 8-year incidence of myopia and change in ocular biometry in young adults and their association with the known risk factors for childhood myopia.

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Purpose: To replicate associations between polymorphisms in the WRB and TSPAN10 genes and strabismus in an independent Finnish cohort and to calculate their population attributable risk.

Methods: Polymorphisms in the WRB (rs2244352) and TSPAN10 (rs6420484) genes were investigated in individuals from the FinnGen study group who had one of three categories of strabismus, with clinical diagnoses of (1) "strabismus-all subtypes" (3,515 cases and 173,384 controls), (2) "convergent concomitant strabismus" (ICD-10 code H50.0; 737 cases and 170,976 controls), and (3) "divergent concomitant strabismus" (ICD-10 code H50.

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Purpose: Hyperopia (farsightedness) has been associated with a deficit in children's educational attainment in some studies. We aimed to investigate the causality of the relationship between refractive error and educational attainment.

Methods: Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis in 74,463 UK Biobank participants was used to estimate the causal effect of refractive error on years spent in full-time education, which was taken as a measure of educational attainment.

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Purpose: Emmetropization requires coordinated scaling of the major ocular components, corneal curvature and axial length. This coordination is achieved in part through a shared set of genetic variants that regulate eye size. Poorly coordinated scaling of corneal curvature and axial length results in refractive error.

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Article Synopsis
  • Risk factor analysis is crucial for creating interventions for myopia, but many identified risk factors lack thorough testing for confounding variables.
  • Statistical methods like Mendelian randomization or randomized clinical trials are necessary to establish causal links between educational pressure, nearwork, time outdoors, and myopia.
  • Evidence suggests that longer education increases myopia risk, while greater outdoor time has a protective effect, although the role of screen time remains unclear and is being considered for potential interventions.
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The prevalence of myopia has markedly increased in East and Southeast Asia, and pathologic consequences of myopia, including myopic maculopathy and high myopia-associated optic neuropathy, are now some of the most common causes of irreversible blindness. Hence, strategies are warranted to reduce the prevalence of myopia and the progression to high myopia because this is the main modifiable risk factor for pathologic myopia. On the basis of published population-based and interventional studies, an important strategy to reduce the development of myopia is encouraging schoolchildren to spend more time outdoors.

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Purpose: The International Myopia Institute (IMI) Yearly Digest highlights new research considered to be of importance since the publication of the first series of IMI white papers.

Methods: A literature search was conducted for articles on myopia between 2019 and mid-2020 to inform definitions and classifications, experimental models, genetics, interventions, clinical trials, and clinical management. Conference abstracts from key meetings in the same period were also considered.

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Purpose: Genome-wide association studies have not identified replicable genetic risk loci for stress or urgency urinary incontinence.

Materials And Methods: We carried out a discovery stage, case control, genome-wide association study in 3 independent discovery cohorts of European women (8,979) for stress incontinence, urgency incontinence, and any incontinence phenotypes. We conducted replication in 6 additional studies of European ancestry (4,069).

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