Journal List > Korean J Ophthalmol > v.25(4) > 1024819

Kim, Hong, Kim, Lee, and Seong: Attenuated Age-Related Thinning of Peripapillary Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer in Long Eyes

Abstract

Purpose

To assess the impact of axial length on the age-related peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thinning.

Methods

This cross-sectional observational comparative case series included 172 eyes from 172 healthy Korean subjects. Peripapillary RNFL thickness was measured using an Optic Disc Cube 200 × 200 scan of spectral domain Cirrus HD OCT and the axial length was measured using IOL Master Advanced Technology. In age groups based on decade, the normal ranges of peripapillary RNFL thickness for average, quadrant, and clock-hour sectors were determined with 95% confidence intervals. After dividing the eyes into two groups according to axial length (cut-off, 24.50 mm), the degrees of age-related RNFL thinning were compared.

Results

Among the eyes included in the study, 53 (30.81%) were considered to be long eyes (axial length, 25.04 ± 0.48 µm) and 119 (69.19%) were short-to-normal length eyes (axial length, 23.57 ± 0.60 µm). The decrease in average RNFL thickness with age was less in long eyes (negative slope, -0.12 µm/yr) than in short-to-normal length eyes (negative slope, -0.32 µm/yr) (p < 0.001).

Conclusions

Age-related thinning of peripapillary RNFL thickness is attenuated in long eyes compared to short-to-normal length eyes.

Glaucoma is a progressive optic neuropathy and the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) is a sensitive indicator of early glaucomatous damage [1,2]. It is well known that older patients have an increased risk for glaucoma. Histologic studies have reported a linear decay of ganglion cell axons as age increases [3]. Myopia has been reported as a risk factor for glaucoma, but, there is also controversy regarding the influence of myopia on peripapillary RNFL thickness.
Budenz et al. [4] found that a decreaseing mean RNFL thickness is correlated with increasing age, axial length and smaller optic disc area measured by optical coherence tomography (OCT). By contrast, Vernon et al. [5] did not find any statistically significant correlation between axial length, refractive error or age and mean RNFL thickness. There have been some studies on Korean eyes to determine the changes in peripapillary RNFL thickness according to the degree of myopia and the effects of age on global and sectoral peripapillary RNFL thicknesses [6-8]. To our knowledge, an association of axial length with age-related peripapillary RNFL thinning in myopic Koreans has never been reported. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of axial length on age-related peripapillary RNFL thinning measured in healthy Korean eyes by a Cirrus HD OCT.

Materials and Methods

Subjects

After obtaining the approval of our Institutional Review Board for this study, we enrolled 172 healthy Korean subjects (age, 26 to 65 years) who visited the Health Promotion Center of our institute. They underwent a comprehensive medical examination including ophthalmologic examination and their clinical records were also reviewed. The subjects were excluded if they had any history of ocular trauma, or intraocular surgical or laser treatment. All participants with diabetes or any other systemic disease or medication affecting the visual field or RNFL were also excluded.

Ophthalmologic examination

Their ophthalmologic exam included the corrected visual acuity (CVA), intraocular pressure (IOP), spherical and cylindrical refractive errors (Auto Ref-Keratometer RK-3; Canon Inc., Tokyo, Japan), axial length (AXL; IOLMaster Advanced Technology, software ver. 5.02; Carl Zeiss Meditec Inc., Dublin, CA, USA), nonmydriatic fundus and optic disc photographs (Fundus Camera VX-10; Kowa Company, Tokyo, Japan), and peripapillary RNFL thickness measurements obtained with a spectral domain Cirrus HD OCT (Model 4000, software ver. 3.0.0.64; Carl Zeiss Meditec Inc.). The IOP was checked with a noncontact pneumotonometry (Tonometer TX-10, Canon Inc.), and then re-checked with a Goldmann applanation tonometry when the measurements were repeatedly higher than 21 mmHg.
The peripapillary RNFL thickness was measured by an Optic Disc Cube 200 × 200 scan of the Cirrus HD OCT. The Cirrus HD OCT measures RNFL thickness along a circle with a 1.73-mm radius around the optic disc. The scanning radius was not adjusted by other factors such as optic disc size. The same instrument was used by the same operator. Measurements were performed without pupil dilation and as previously described elsewhere [9]. Scans with blinks or with a low signal strength (<6) were excluded from the analysis.
Only healthy eyes with a CVA of 20 / 30 or better, IOP of less than 21 mmHg, spherical refractive error within +/- 4.00 diopters and cylinder refractive error within +/- 3.00 diopters, 22.00 < AXL ≤ 26.00 mm, and normal appearance of optic nerve head, RNFL and fundus were included in the study. Both eyes of each subject were included if they satisfied the entry criteria.

Statistical analysis

After dividing the study population into two groups according to their AXL (group 1, long eye group, 24.50 < AXL ≤ 26.00 mm; group 2, short-to-normal length eye group, 22.00 < AXL ≤ 24.50 mm) [10], the mean RNFL thickness and the correlation coefficient (β) of simple linear regression with age were determined for each scanned sector and compared between two groups. A comparison between the β values was performed using the MedCalc ver. 9.6.4.0 (MedCalc Software, Mariakerke, Belgium) and all other statistical analyses were performed using the SPSS ver. 12.0.1 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA).

Results

One hundred seventy-two eyes of 172 healthy Korean subjects were analyzed and their characteristics are shown at Table 1. According to their AXL, 53 eyes (30.81%) were classified as long eyes (mean axial length ± SD, 25.04 ± 0.48 µm) and 119 eyes (69.19%) were classified as short-to-normal length eyes (mean axial length ± SD, 23.57 ± 0.60 µm). Age, CVA, and IOP were similar between the two groups.
Table 2 shows comparisons of the RNFL thickness between the groups. The mean average RNFL thicknesses of long eyes and short-to-normal length eyes were 96.32 ± 8.47 µm and 98.87 ± 10.01, respectively. The RNFLs were thinner in the long eyes than in the short-to-normal length eyes in the nasal and inferior quadrants (p = 0.032 and p < 0.001, respectively). However, the temporal quadrant was thicker in the long eyes than in the short-to-normal length eyes (p = 0.007).
Table 3 shows the linear regression of the effects of age on RNFL thickness. The decrease in average RNFL thickness with increasing age in long eyes (negative slope, -0.12 µm/yr) was less than that in short-to-normal length eyes (negative slope, -0.32 µm/yr) (p < 0.001). In all quadrants, age-related RNFL thinning was significantly different between the two groups (all p < 0.001) (Table 3 and Fig. 1). In detail, for superior and inferior quadrants, the RNFL thickness in long eyes declined more with age than RNFL thickness in short-to-normal length eyes. Meanwhile, for the temporal quadrant, the RNFL thickness in long eyes showed faster thinning with age compared to the other groups. And, in long eyes, the RNFL thicknesses on the inferior and temporal quadrants decreased according to age; in short-to-normal length eyes, the RNFL thicknesses decreased in age in three quadrants, not including the nasal quadrant.

Discussion

Our results show a statistically significant linear decrease in average RNFL thickness with age, with a negative slope of 0.12 µm/yr for long eyes and 0.32 µm/yr for short-to-normal length eyes. The decrease in average RNFL thickness with increasing age in long eyes was less than that in short-to-normal length eyes. With respect to quadrants, the RNFL thicknesses for the superior and inferior quadrants in long eyes declined more with age than the short-to-normal length eyes. Further, in long eyes, the RNFL thicknesses in the inferior and temporal quadrants decreased according to age; in short-to-normal length eyes, there was a decrease in three quadrants, not including the nasal quadrant. Our data are somewhat different from those of previous reports; Parikh et al. [11] found the maximum decay in the superior and temporal quadrants and Sung et al. [12] observed the steepest slopes in the superior, inferior, and nasal quadrants using the Stratus OCT. The exact reasons for these differences are unclear, but they could be due to different sample sizes and age distributions or ethnic populations. The precise mechanism underlying our finding is not fully understood yet. It is possible that the distribution of a similar volume of RNFL in a larger area could cause the average RNFL thickness to be thinner in long eyes compared to short-to-normal length eyes. If the rate of absolute volume of RNFL loss is similar in both eye groups, the rate of RNFL thinning may seem more attenuated in long eyes than in other eyes.
In addition, in our study, RNFLs were thinner in the long eyes than in the short-to-normal length eyes, except for in the temporal quadrant. The temporal quadrant RNFL was thicker in long eyes. Several studies [6,13] have reported that a high myopia group has significantly thicker RNFLs in the temporal quadrants, which is similar to our findings. In long eyes, the elongation of the globe leads to retinal dragging toward the temporal horizon. Thicker RNFLs in the temporal quadrant could be related to retinal dragging. There have been several studies reporting a significant association between myopia and RNFL thickness [14,15], but our present study did not find a significant association between myopia and RNFL thickness, This difference might be due to the fact that we did not include very long eyes and highly myopic eyes. Further studies including very long eyes and highly myopic eyes are needed to establish the association between axial length and age-related peripapillary RNFL thinning and to confirm our findings in glaucomatous eyes as well as healthy eyes.
In conclusion, we found that age-related thinning of peripapillary RNFL thickness is attenuated in long eyes compared to short-to-normal length eyes. Therefore, we suggest the need for carefully interpretation of OCT results in patients with mild degrees of myopia.

Figures and Tables

Fig. 1
Relationship between age and average peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness in long (A) and short-to-normal length (B) eyes.
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Table 1
Characteristics of long and short-to-normal length eyes
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Values are presented as mean ± SD.

CVA = corrected visual acuity; IOP = intraocular pressure; logMAR = logarithm of the minimal angle of resolution; AXL = axial length.

*Long eyes, 24.5 < AXL ≤ 26.0 mm; Short-to-normal eyes, 22.0 < AXL ≤ 24.5 mm; p < 0.05.

Table 2
Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness in long and short-to-normal length eyes
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Values are presented as mean ± SD.

RNFL = retinal nerve fiber layer; AXL = axial length.

*Long eyes, 24.5 < AXL ≤ 26.0 mm; Short-to-normal eyes, 22.0 < AXL ≤ 24.5 mm; p < 0.05.

Table 3
Linear regression equation between age and retinal nerve fiber layer thickness in long (group 1) and short-to-normal (group 2) length eyes
kjo-25-248-i003

RNFL = retinal nerve fiber layer.

*p<0.05.

Notes

No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

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