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Comprehensive analysis of the candidate genes CCL2, CCR2, and TLR4 in age-related macular degeneration

Despriet, Dominiek D G; Bergen, Arthur A B; Merriam, Joanna E; Zernant, Jana; Barile, Gaetano R; Smith, R Theodore; Barbazetto, Irene A; van Soest, Simone; Bakker, Arne; de Jong, Paulus T V M; Allikmets, Rando; Klaver, Caroline C W
PURPOSE: To determine whether variants in the candidate genes TLR4, CCL2, and CCR2 are associated with age-related macular degeneration (AMD). METHODS: This study was performed in two independent Caucasian populations that included 357 cases and 173 controls from the Netherlands and 368 cases and 368 controls from the United States. Exon 4 of the TLR4 gene and the promoter, all exons, and flanking intronic regions of the CCL2 and CCR2 genes were analyzed in the Dutch study and common variants were validated in the U.S. study. Quantitative (q)PCR reactions were performed to evaluate expression of these genes in laser-dissected retinal pigment epithelium from 13 donor AMD and 13 control eyes. RESULTS: Analysis of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the TLR4 gene did not show a significant association between D299G or T399I and AMD, nor did haplotypes containing these variants. Univariate analyses of the SNPs in CCL2 and CCR2 did not demonstrate an association with AMD. For CCR2, haplotype frequencies were not significantly different between cases and controls. For CCL2, one haplotype containing the minor allele of C35C was significantly associated with AMD (P = 0.03), but this did not sustain after adjustment for multiple testing (q = 0.30). Expression analysis did not demonstrate altered RNA expression of CCL2 and CCR2 in the retinal pigment epithelium from AMD eyes (for CCL2 P = 0.62; for CCR2 P = 0.97). CONCLUSIONS: No evidence was found of an association between TLR4, CCR2, and CCL2 and AMD, which implies that the common genetic variation in these genes does not play a significant role in the etiology of AMD
PMCID:2754756
PMID: 18172114
ISSN: 0146-0404
CID: 149082

Pseudo-vitelliform macular detachment and cuticular drusen: exclusion of 6 candidate genes

Barbazetto, Irene A; Yannuzzi, Nicolas A; Klais, Christina M; Merriam, Joanna E; Zernant, Jana; Peiretti, Enrico; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Allikmets, Rando
PURPOSE: The etiology and genetic cause of pseudo-vitelliform macular detachment with cuticular drusen (PVMD/CD) are unknown; nor is it clear if this phenotype represents a separate disease entity, or is a sub-phenotype of disorders with overlapping clinical presentation. To answer this question, we screened a cohort of patients affected with PVMD/CD for variation in six plausible candidate genes (ABCA4, VMD2, TIMP-3, peripherin/RDS, fibulin 5 (FIBL5) and complement factor H (CFH)) associated with diseases of overlapping phenotypes. METHODS: Twenty-eight patients, diagnosed with pseudo-vitelliform macular detachment and cuticular drusen, were evaluated by clinical examination, fundus photography, fluorescein angiography and autofluorescence imaging. DNA from all study subjects were screened for variants in the ABCA4, VMD2, TIMP-3, peripherin/RDS, FIBL5 and CFH genes by a combination of DHPLC, array screening and direct sequencing. RESULTS: All patients presented with cuticular drusen; pseudo-vitelliform detachment was seen in 21 cases, while atrophic changes following regression of the detachment were seen in the remaining 7 subjects. Visual acuity ranged from 20/20 to CF. The screening revealed an I32V mutation in peripherin/RDS in one patient and 2ABCA4 variants, T897I and G1961E, in 2 more patients. No amino acid-altering variants were detected in VMD2, TIMP-3, and FIBL5 genes. The frequency of the CFH Y402H variant in this cohort corresponded to that detected in the general population. CONCLUSIONS: Screening of 6 candidate genes detected possibly disease-associated mutations in only 3/28 (10.7%) of patients presenting with PVMD/CD, eliminating these genes as causal for this phenotype
PMID: 18161617
ISSN: 1381-6810
CID: 94072

Autofluorescence of basal laminar drusen [Case Report]

Meyerle, Catherine B; Smith, R Theodore; Barbazetto, Irene A; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A
PURPOSE: To compare noninvasive autofluorescence (AF) photography with conventional fundus photography and fluorescein angiography (FA) in the detection of basal laminar drusen (BLD). METHODS: A retrospective case review of 20 patients with BLD studied with AF and conventional imaging was performed. Three selected patients with different degrees of BLD are presented. AF imaging employed an excitation filter at 580 nm and a barrier filter at 695 nm with acquisition by a Topcon 50X fundus camera. Corresponding detail regions in each image were enlarged for comparison. The AF detail image was registered by a projective transformation in Matlab (Mathworks 7.0, Natick, MA) with the color photograph/red free photograph (RF) and/or FA image detail for exact superimposition in Photoshop and lesion comparison. RESULTS: Each visible drusen in the color or RF photograph corresponded when superimposed to a focal hypoautofluorescent lesion in the AF image. However, similar to the starry sky pattern in FA, the AF lesions significantly outnumbered the clinically evident drusen. When BLD lesions were not advanced enough to show the classic starry sky fluorescein hyperfluorescence, the BLD were detectable with AF. CONCLUSIONS: In our case series, AF imaging demonstrated a higher level of sensitivity when compared with conventional fundus photography and is less invasive than FA for the detection of BLD. Fundus AF, therefore, is valuable for diagnosing and following BLD, particularly since these patients are at risk for development of pseudovitelliform detachment which may simulate CNV
PMCID:2771561
PMID: 18040253
ISSN: 0275-004x
CID: 94073

Ocular changes during pregnancy

Barbazetto, Irene A; Pizzarello, Louis D
Pregnancy can cause multiple physiologic and non-physiologic changes throughout the body; the eye is no exception. Ocular changes during pregnancy can be physiologic or pathologic, or these changes can be an effect of a pre-existing condition. While many of theses changes are reversible, some may lead to lasting visual impairment. The aim of this review is to give an overview of the currently available literature on ocular changes during pregnancy.
PMID: 17651545
ISSN: 1527-7313
CID: 160428

Ocular photodynamic therapy--standard applications and new indications. Part 2. Review of the literature and personal experience

Mennel, Stefan; Barbazetto, Irene; Meyer, Carsten H; Peter, Silvia; Stur, Michael
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) has become a well-established treatment for vascular forms of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). The implementation of evidence-based medicine principles into the treatment regimen of AMD seems to be immensly important, since AMD continues to be the most frequent cause of blindness among patients older than 65 years in industrialized countries. Numerous randomized prospective studies demonstrated high levels of evidence for the efficacy of various treatment approaches such as laser photocoagulation, PDT, subretinal surgery or novel anti-angiogenic drugs [Arch Ophthalmol 2006;124:597-599]. The high evidence shown by these studies supported the rationale to use PDT also in additional, less frequent, vasoproliferative diseases. Although these 'case series' and 'individual case control studies' have a low level of evidence, they give us important information for treatment decisions in these rare conditions. The goal of this survey is to review the current literature regarding PDT in vasoproliferative and exudative ocular diseases outside AMD. Many studies modified the treatment parameters of PDT to address the specific pathology of the underlying disease. Table 1 summarizes the diseases and treatment parameters that are described in this part 2, the entire table of this review is included in part 1 (www.karger.com/doi/10.1159/ 000101922).
PMID: 17728549
ISSN: 0030-3755
CID: 160429

Ocular photodynamic therapy--standard applications and new indications (part 1). Review of the literature and personal experience

Mennel, Stefan; Barbazetto, Irene; Meyer, Carsten H; Peter, Silvia; Stur, Michael
Ocular photodynamic therapy (PDT) was introduced as a novel treatment for neovascular forms of age-related macular degeneration and choroidal neovascularization (CNV) secondary to pathologic myopia in the mid/end 1990s. The current treatment recommendations are based on the results of two large, prospective, multicenter, randomized clinical trials (Treatment of Age-Related Macular Degeneration with Photodynamic Therapy and Verteporfin in Photodynamic Therapy Studies) and thousands of patients have been treated worldwide over the last years. Meanwhile, PDT has been performed in several other ocular pathologies with some remarkable results, however, with most reports being case reports and small case series without statistical significance. These extended applications include CNV secondary to choroiditis and retinochoroiditis, angioid streaks, central serous chorioretinopathy, retinal angiomatous proliferation, parafoveal telangiectasia or CNV associated with macular dystrophy and idiopathic CNV, as well as diseases without CNV, such as choroidal hemangioma, retinal hamartoma, choroidal melanoma, chronic central serous chorioretinopathy, angiomatous lesions secondary to systemic diseases, rubeosis iridis or neovascular glaucoma. To date, with the introduction of anti-VEGF therapy, the role of PDT will certainly change. However, it is reasonable to believe that it will maintain an important role in combination therapy due to its unique properties of selective vascular targeting. Therefore, it is essential for the ophthalmologist to be familiar with the extended applications and their modifications of treatment parameters. This review will summarize the standard and experimental applications of PDT based on our own results and the literature.
PMID: 17579286
ISSN: 0030-3755
CID: 160427

A common haplotype in the complement regulatory gene factor H (HF1/CFH) predisposes individuals to age-related macular degeneration

Hageman, Gregory S; Anderson, Don H; Johnson, Lincoln V; Hancox, Lisa S; Taiber, Andrew J; Hardisty, Lisa I; Hageman, Jill L; Stockman, Heather A; Borchardt, James D; Gehrs, Karen M; Smith, Richard J H; Silvestri, Giuliana; Russell, Stephen R; Klaver, Caroline C W; Barbazetto, Irene; Chang, Stanley; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Barile, Gaetano R; Merriam, John C; Smith, R Theodore; Olsh, Adam K; Bergeron, Julie; Zernant, Jana; Merriam, Joanna E; Gold, Bert; Dean, Michael; Allikmets, Rando
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the most frequent cause of irreversible blindness in the elderly in developed countries. Our previous studies implicated activation of complement in the formation of drusen, the hallmark lesion of AMD. Here, we show that factor H (HF1), the major inhibitor of the alternative complement pathway, accumulates within drusen and is synthesized by the retinal pigmented epithelium. Because previous linkage analyses identified chromosome 1q25-32, which harbors the factor H gene (HF1/CFH), as an AMD susceptibility locus, we analyzed HF1 for genetic variation in two independent cohorts comprised of approximately 900 AMD cases and 400 matched controls. We found association of eight common HF1 SNPs with AMD; two common missense variants exhibit highly significant associations (I62V, chi2 = 26.1 and P = 3.2 x 10(-7) and Y402H, chi2 = 54.4 and P = 1.6 x 10(-13)). Haplotype analysis reveals that multiple HF1 variants confer elevated or reduced risk of AMD. One common at-risk haplotype is present at a frequency of 50% in AMD cases and 29% in controls [odds ratio (OR) = 2.46, 95% confidence interval (1.95-3.11)]. Homozygotes for this haplotype account for 24% of cases and 8% of controls [OR = 3.51, 95% confidence interval (2.13-5.78)]. Several protective haplotypes are also identified (OR = 0.44-0.55), further implicating HF1 function in the pathogenetic mechanisms underlying AMD. We propose that genetic variation in a regulator of the alternative complement pathway, when combined with a triggering event, such as infection, underlie a major proportion of AMD in the human population
PMCID:1088171
PMID: 15870199
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 103424

A novel TIMP3 mutation associated with Sorsby fundus dystrophy

Barbazetto, Irene A; Hayashi, Masanori; Klais, Christina M; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Allikmets, Rando
PMID: 15824229
ISSN: 0003-9950
CID: 103425

Automated detection of macular drusen using geometric background leveling and threshold selection

Smith, R Theodore; Chan, Jackie K; Nagasaki, Takayuki; Ahmad, Umer F; Barbazetto, Irene; Sparrow, Janet; Figueroa, Marta; Merriam, Joanna
BACKGROUND: Age-related macular degeneration (ARMD) is the most prevalent cause of visual loss in patients older than 60 years in the United States. Observation of drusen is the hallmark finding in the clinical evaluation of ARMD. OBJECTIVES: To segment and quantify drusen found in patients with ARMD using image analysis and to compare the efficacy of image analysis segmentation with that of stereoscopic manual grading of drusen. DESIGN: Retrospective study. SETTING: University referral center.Patients Photographs were randomly selected from an available database of patients with known ARMD in the ongoing Columbia University Macular Genetics Study. All patients were white and older than 60 years. INTERVENTIONS: Twenty images from 17 patients were selected as representative of common manifestations of drusen. Image preprocessing included automated color balancing and, where necessary, manual segmentation of confounding lesions such as geographic atrophy (3 images). The operator then chose among 3 automated processing options suggested by predominant drusen type. Automated processing consisted of elimination of background variability by a mathematical model and subsequent histogram-based threshold selection. A retinal specialist using a graphic tablet while viewing stereo pairs constructed digital drusen drawings for each image. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The sensitivity and specificity of drusen segmentation using the automated method with respect to manual stereoscopic drusen drawings were calculated on a rigorous pixel-by-pixel basis. RESULTS: The median sensitivity and specificity of automated segmentation were 70% and 81%, respectively. After preprocessing and option choice, reproducibility of automated drusen segmentation was necessarily 100%. CONCLUSIONS: Automated drusen segmentation can be reliably performed on digital fundus photographs and result in successful quantification of drusen in a more precise manner than is traditionally possible with manual stereoscopic grading of drusen. With only minor preprocessing requirements, this automated detection technique may dramatically improve our ability to monitor drusen in ARMD
PMCID:2884376
PMID: 15710816
ISSN: 0003-9950
CID: 149089

Clinical and genetic characterization of patients with pseudo-vitellifom macular dystrophy and cuticular drusen [Meeting Abstract]

Barbazetto, IA; Yannuzzi, NA; Merriam, JE; Zernant, J; Peiretti, E; Klais, CM; Buckta, LA; Yannuzzi, LA; Allikmets, R
ISI:000227980401842
ISSN: 0146-0404
CID: 103694