EyeDigest Magazine October 2021

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Eye Vitamins Beneficial to Most, But Harmful to 1 in 6? By Gerry Belgraver Chief Operating Officer, ArcticDX Is it time to utilize pharmacogenetics to guide protocol for your AMD patients? We believe so, and here is why. Sometimes AREDS Vitamins can cause harm. Thousands of Canadians with macular degeneration, or a family history of the disease, are taking an AREDS eye vitamin with zinc. These vitamins have reduced the risk of vision loss in many patients. However, many eye doctors are unaware of recent independent research showing that these supplements are harmful to about 15% of patients, speeding up vision loss. Since the AREDS2 study showed that the biological effect of AREDS & AREDS2 supplements is identical in reducing the risk of progression, this article will use these terms interchangeably. These newer studies show that many people with specific macular degeneration risk genes benefit greatly from AREDS vitamins. Their risk of wet AMD is reduced not by a meagre 25% but in the range of 50-60%. However, another 15% of AMD patients have other risk genes. For these patients, taking AREDS supplements increases their risk five-fold for developing “wet AMD,” resulting in vision loss and requiring eye injections. This effect was first validated by Harvard Medical

School ophthalmologist Demetrios Vavvas, MD and his team when analyzing the original AREDS study. They showed that some patients with specific macular degeneration risk genes benefited from AREDS supplements, but it harmed others. This observation was consistent in both a discovery and validation set of patients. Vavvas’ research convinced many that genetic testing is a valuable guide before AREDS/AREDS2 supplement use. Even so, it has remained controversial among eye care physicians, primarily due to strident opposition from one of the patent holders – the US National Eye Institute. Recently a team of independent retina specialists led by Dr. Stephen Kaufman, MD, sought to resolve the issue using a case-only approach. They looked at patients who already had wet AMD and then retrospectively looked at the genetics of those who did and those who did not take an AREDS/ AREDS2 supplement prior to developing wet AMD. They confirmed a strong interaction between genetics and AREDS supplement use in the development of wet AMD. Their findings supported those of Vavvas and his team. How was this done? Patients with a reliable history of at least five years of AREDS use (AREDS users) or less than one month of AREDS use (AREDS nonusers) were genotyped. Those assessing the Eye Digest Magazine | 5


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EyeDigest Magazine October 2021 by BC Doctors of Optometry - Issuu