Metabolomic Profiling of Open-Angle Glaucoma Etiologic Endotypes: Tohoku Multi-Omics Glaucoma Study.
Akiko Hanyuda, Yoshihiko Raita, Takahiro Ninomiya, Kazuki Hashimoto, Naoko Takada, Kota Sato, Jin Inoue, Seizo Koshiba, Gen Tamiya, Akira Narita, Masato Akiyama, Kazuko Omodaka, Satoru Tsuda, Yu Yokoyama, Noriko Himori, Yasuko Yamamoto, Takazumi Taniguchi, Kazuno Negishi, Toru Nakazawa
Summary
Integrated metabolomic profiles identified five distinct etiologic endotypes of OAG, suggesting pathological mechanisms related with a high-risk group of central vision loss progression in the Japanese population.
Abstract
PURPOSE
The purpose of this study was to investigate biologically meaningful endotypes of open-angle glaucoma (OAG) by applying unsupervised machine learning to plasma metabolites.
METHODS
This retrospective longitudinal cohort study enrolled consecutive patients aged ≥20 years with OAG at Tohoku University Hospital from January 2017 to January 2020. OAG was confirmed based on comprehensive ophthalmic examinations. Among the 523 patients with OAG with available clinical metabolomic data, 173 patients were longitudinally followed up for ≥2 years, with available data from ≥5 reliable visual field (VF) tests without glaucoma surgery. We collected fasting blood samples and clinical data at enrollment and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to profile 45 plasma metabolites in a targeted approach. After computing a distance matrix of preprocessed metabolites with Pearson distance, gap statistics determined the optimal number of OAG endotypes. Its risk factors, clinical presentations, metabolomic profiles, and progression rate of sector-based VF loss were compared across endotypes.
RESULTS
Five distinct OAG endotypes were identified. The highest-risk endotype (endotype B) showed a significant faster progression of central VF loss (P = 0.007). Compared with patients with other endotypes, those with endotype B were more likely to have a high prevalence of dyslipidemia, cold extremities, oxidative stress, and low OAG genetic risk scores. Pathway analysis of metabolomic profiles implicated altered fatty acid and ketone body metabolism in this endotype, with 34 differentially enriched pathways (false discovery rate [FDR] < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Integrated metabolomic profiles identified five distinct etiologic endotypes of OAG, suggesting pathological mechanisms related with a high-risk group of central vision loss progression in the Japanese population.
More by Akiko Hanyuda
View full profile →Long-term Alcohol Consumption and Risk of Exfoliation Glaucoma or Glaucoma Suspect Status among United States Health Professionals.
Symptomatic Presbyopia may Develop Earlier in Patients With Glaucoma-A Cross-Sectional Retrospective Cohort Study.
The Clinical Usefulness of a Glaucoma Polygenic Risk Score in 4 Population-Based European Ancestry Cohorts.
Top Research in Disease Progression
Browse all →Estimating Optical Coherence Tomography Structural Measurement Floors to Improve Detection of Progression in Advanced Glaucoma.
Progressive Macula Vessel Density Loss in Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma: A Longitudinal Study.
Detecting Structural Progression in Glaucoma with Optical Coherence Tomography.
In the Knowledge Library
Discussion
Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.