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Chlamydia infection status, genotype, and age-related macular degeneration

Chlamydia infection status, genotype, and age-related macular degeneration
Chlamydia infection status, genotype, and age-related macular degeneration
PURPOSE: To evaluate whether Chlamydia (C.) infections are associated with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and to assess if this association is influenced by the complement factor H (CFH) Y402H or the high temperature requirement A serine peptidase 1 (HTRA1) rs11200638 risk genotypes.

METHODS: One hundred ninety-nine AMD patients with early and late forms of the disease and 100 unaffected controls, at least 50 years old were included in the study. Patients in the AMD and control groups were selected based on known CFH Y402H variant genotype status (one third homozygous CC, one third heterozygous CT, and one third wild-type TT). Plasma from all patients and controls was tested for C. pneumoniae, C. trachomatis, and C. psittaci IgG seropositivity using a micro-immunofluorescent assay to establish previous infection status. Assays were conducted blind to risk genotypes and the results analyzed using univariate and multivariate (logistic regression) analysis.

RESULTS:IgG seropositivity to C. pneumoniae was most prevalent (69.2%, n=207), followed by C. trachomatis (7.4%, n=22) and C. psittaci (3.3%, n=10). No association was found between each of the three Chlamydia species IgG seropositivity and AMD status or severity (early/late). There was also no significant association between Chlamydia species IgG seropositivity and AMD status or severity, in patients carrying at least one CFH Y402H risk allele (C) or HTRA1 rs11200638 risk allele (A), with univariate or logistic regression analysis.

CONCLUSIONS:Chlamydia infection status does not appear to be associated with AMD status or severity. The presence of CFH Y402H and HTRA1 rs11200638 risk genotypes does not alter this negative association.
29-37
Khandhadia, Sam
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Foster, Sebastian
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Cree, Angela J.
6724b71b-8828-4abb-971f-0856c2af555e
Griffiths, Helen
a097fdaa-d3d6-49a9-9c69-0e6e5a5d518b
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Goverdhan, Srinivas
9ae32d5a-5c82-48a4-962d-1ed8acc3991e
Lotery, Andrew J.
5ecc2d2d-d0b4-468f-ad2c-df7156f8e514
Khandhadia, Sam
a84355f9-8dd3-4377-864f-27fa059ad847
Foster, Sebastian
14ab806f-3591-4929-b910-94d96391d514
Cree, Angela J.
6724b71b-8828-4abb-971f-0856c2af555e
Griffiths, Helen
a097fdaa-d3d6-49a9-9c69-0e6e5a5d518b
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Goverdhan, Srinivas
9ae32d5a-5c82-48a4-962d-1ed8acc3991e
Lotery, Andrew J.
5ecc2d2d-d0b4-468f-ad2c-df7156f8e514

Khandhadia, Sam, Foster, Sebastian, Cree, Angela J., Griffiths, Helen, Osmond, Clive, Goverdhan, Srinivas and Lotery, Andrew J. (2012) Chlamydia infection status, genotype, and age-related macular degeneration. Molecular Vision, 18, 29-37. (PMID:22259222)

Record type: Article

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate whether Chlamydia (C.) infections are associated with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and to assess if this association is influenced by the complement factor H (CFH) Y402H or the high temperature requirement A serine peptidase 1 (HTRA1) rs11200638 risk genotypes.

METHODS: One hundred ninety-nine AMD patients with early and late forms of the disease and 100 unaffected controls, at least 50 years old were included in the study. Patients in the AMD and control groups were selected based on known CFH Y402H variant genotype status (one third homozygous CC, one third heterozygous CT, and one third wild-type TT). Plasma from all patients and controls was tested for C. pneumoniae, C. trachomatis, and C. psittaci IgG seropositivity using a micro-immunofluorescent assay to establish previous infection status. Assays were conducted blind to risk genotypes and the results analyzed using univariate and multivariate (logistic regression) analysis.

RESULTS:IgG seropositivity to C. pneumoniae was most prevalent (69.2%, n=207), followed by C. trachomatis (7.4%, n=22) and C. psittaci (3.3%, n=10). No association was found between each of the three Chlamydia species IgG seropositivity and AMD status or severity (early/late). There was also no significant association between Chlamydia species IgG seropositivity and AMD status or severity, in patients carrying at least one CFH Y402H risk allele (C) or HTRA1 rs11200638 risk allele (A), with univariate or logistic regression analysis.

CONCLUSIONS:Chlamydia infection status does not appear to be associated with AMD status or severity. The presence of CFH Y402H and HTRA1 rs11200638 risk genotypes does not alter this negative association.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 January 2012
Published date: 10 January 2012
Organisations: Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 336653
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/336653
PURE UUID: ca84f768-d2cd-42da-9fa6-d71f65942836
ORCID for Angela J. Cree: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1987-8900
ORCID for Clive Osmond: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9054-4655
ORCID for Andrew J. Lotery: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5541-4305

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Date deposited: 03 Apr 2012 09:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:24

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Contributors

Author: Sam Khandhadia
Author: Sebastian Foster
Author: Angela J. Cree ORCID iD
Author: Helen Griffiths
Author: Clive Osmond ORCID iD
Author: Srinivas Goverdhan

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