AI Article Synopsis

  • The retinal microvasculature plays a crucial role in organ health and disease, and can be assessed noninvasively through retinal fundus imaging.
  • An analysis of nearly 100,000 retinal images revealed that lower vascular complexity and density are linked to higher risks for various health issues, including cardiovascular problems and diabetes.
  • Using genetic analysis, the study identified new genetic markers related to vascular health, suggesting that retinal imaging could be an effective biomarker for predicting future health risks.

Article Abstract

Background: The microvasculature, the smallest blood vessels in the body, has key roles in maintenance of organ health and tumorigenesis. The retinal fundus is a window for human in vivo noninvasive assessment of the microvasculature. Large-scale complementary machine learning-based assessment of the retinal vasculature with phenome-wide and genome-wide analyses may yield new insights into human health and disease.

Methods: We used 97 895 retinal fundus images from 54 813 UK Biobank participants. Using convolutional neural networks to segment the retinal microvasculature, we calculated vascular density and fractal dimension as a measure of vascular branching complexity. We associated these indices with 1866 incident -based conditions (median 10-year follow-up) and 88 quantitative traits, adjusting for age, sex, smoking status, and ethnicity.

Results: Low retinal vascular fractal dimension and density were significantly associated with higher risks for incident mortality, hypertension, congestive heart failure, renal failure, type 2 diabetes, sleep apnea, anemia, and multiple ocular conditions, as well as corresponding quantitative traits. Genome-wide association of vascular fractal dimension and density identified 7 and 13 novel loci, respectively, that were enriched for pathways linked to angiogenesis (eg, vascular endothelial growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor receptor, angiopoietin, and WNT signaling pathways) and inflammation (eg, interleukin, cytokine signaling).

Conclusions: Our results indicate that the retinal vasculature may serve as a biomarker for future cardiometabolic and ocular disease and provide insights into genes and biological pathways influencing microvascular indices. Moreover, such a framework highlights how deep learning of images can quantify an interpretable phenotype for integration with electronic health record, biomarker, and genetic data to inform risk prediction and risk modification.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8746912PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.057709DOI Listing

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