Gene Mutation Linked to Elderly Blindness
(11-March-2005/Reuters)
A gene mutation has been linked to age-related macular degeneration, the leading
cause of blindness in the elderly, by three sets of researchers working
independently. An estimated 15 million Americans suffer from the disorder, a
number expected to double as the baby boom generation ages.
Being able to relate a gene mutation to the likelihood of developing the illness
may lead to better tests and eventually treatments, the scientists hope.
"I don't think it's going to be a year or two ... but I'd guess less than 10
years" before a treatment might become available, said Albert O. Edwards, the
lead researcher for one group of researchers reporting on the link.
In cases of macular degeneration the central region of the eye's retina
deteriorates, damaging or destroying vision. There are no broadly effective
treatments, though a recently approved drug can slow the disease for some
patients.
The new gene findings are reported in separate papers in this week's online
issue of the journal Science. The research groups were led by Edwards, at the
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Josephine Hoh of Yale
University School of Medicine and Margaret A. Pericak-Vance of Duke University
Medical Center.
The teams studied the genes of people with AMD and others without the disease
and found that people with a variation in the CFH gene were more likely to have
the illness. The gene is involved in the production of a protein called
complement factor H that helps regulate inflammation in a branch of the immune
system.
According to the Texas-based researchers, as many as half of AMD cases in the
elderly could be related to the gene variant.
Edwards, now the president of the Institute for Retina Research at Presbyterian
Hospital of Dallas, noted that risk factors for AMD are similar to those for
cardiovascular illness, including obesity, lack of exercise and smoking.
"There is an unexplained increased risk of cardiovascular mortality in people
with AMD," he said. "This may actually go beyond eye disease ... those studies
have to be done."
Pericak-Vance, director of the Duke Center for Human Genetics, said her study
indicated that the gene variant could account for about 43 percent of the risk
of developing AMD for older adults.
"This gene opens the door to a whole new understanding of the factors that
contribute to this disease," she said in a statement. "The finding may
ultimately lead to new methods for identifying those at high risk for macular
degeneration and suggests new pathways for drug development."
Hoh, an assistant professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health
at Yale, reported that "Caucasian AMD patients are at least four times more
likely to have one particular alteration in the CFH gene that produces a
different form of the CFH protein, compared to individuals without the disease."
Dennis Schultz of Oregon Health and Science University, who two years ago
identified a different gene involved in some cases of AMD, said the studies are
an important finding, though not yet the whole story.
"It's complex, very difficult to understand, there are many genes involved and
the environment plays a role as well," said Schultz, who was not part of the
three study teams.
There are two forms of macular degeneration. The more common "dry" form
progresses relatively slowly. The less common "wet" form, involving bleeding in
the eye, can destroy vision rapidly. Both forms were associated with the CFH
gene variation.
In December the Food and Drug Administration (news - web sites) approved the
drug Macugen for treatment of the wet form of AMD. In studies untreated patients
had about a 45 percent chance of significant vision loss in a year compared with
30 percent for patients on Macugen. In addition, supplements including zinc and
vitamins E, C and A have been shown to help some AMD patients.
The researchers was funded by the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Fund for the Arts
and Sciences, the National Eye Institute, the National Institute on Aging, the
National Center for Research Resources and Research to Prevent Blindness.