Glaucoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
National Taiwan University Hospital
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the possible candidate gene of Primary Angle-Closure Glaucoma.
Glaucoma has long been recognised as a leading cause of blindness, and that the scale of the
problem will only increase with future population growth and increasing life expectancy (1).
The epidemiological information available in 1993 in the World Health Organization's (WHO)
global data bank on blindness was reviewed by Thylefors and Négrel (1). They developed a
simple model estimating the number of glaucoma blind people in each World Bank region.
Primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) was judged to be responsible for three million blind,
primary angle closure glaucoma (PACG) for two million, and for congenital glaucoma the
figure was 200 000, giving a total of 5.2 million blind. This represents 15% of global
blindness. The number of people affected by glaucoma was estimated to be about 20 million.
In 1996, Quigley used 111 published reports of glaucoma prevalence to construct a
statistical model of the number of people affected by glaucoma worldwide (2). Data were
included only if the study design, methods, and reported results met certain specific
criteria. The countries of the world were arranged in seven groups according to similarities
in ethnicity and presumed characteristics of glaucoma. For each region, the available age
specific prevalence of OAG and ACG were applied to population projections for the year 2000.
It was estimated that 66.8 million people were affected by OAG and ACG, with nearly equal
numbers of people affected by each disease. Few prevalence studies described secondary
glaucoma separately, but an estimate of six million for secondary glaucoma was reached,
making a total, without childhood glaucoma, of around 73 million affected. Of these, 6.7
million were thought to be blind (2).
There was reliable epidemiologic evidence to suggest that PACG is more common among Eskimos
(3) and Chinese (4). As POAG was common in the western countries, there was a large
population at risk in Asia (5). PACG among Asians was more frequently chronic and has few
symptoms (6). Therefore, persons might not be motivated by symptoms to present to medical
attention until significant visual damage has occurred in this region. A population-based
study of screening techniques for PACG was performed in the township of Jin Shan in rural
Taiwan (7). This joint US-Taiwanese project, published in 1996, identified a target
population of 5441 people aged 40 years and older, of whom 562 were examined. A gonioscopic
examination was carried out on all subjects. PACG was diagnosed in people with a "narrow"
angle and either an IOP >18 mm Hg, an increase in IOP 8 mm Hg on dark prone provocation
test, or a previous "acute" episode of angle closure with an iridectomy. The diagnosis did
not depend on the presence of a visual field defect or structural optic neuropathy. There
were 17 people diagnosed as suffering PACG (3.0%). Only 35% of cases gave a history of
symptoms characteristic of "acute" angle closure. Two of these 17 people (12%) were blind in
both eyes (7). As aforementioned, Taiwan has a high prevalence of PACG, which usually leads
to blindness ultimately. There are many reported studies on genes of POAG and normal-tension
glaucoma from Asia, including Japan (14,21,29), China (25), and Korea (24). However, studies
about genetics of PACG were lacking. Hence, in this study, we use the model of genomewide
microsatellite genotyping with method of linkage disequilibrium to study the possible
candidate gene of PACG. Then, we will further sequence the cDNA forPAX6 to find out the
possible mutation in the family with well-defined pedigree.
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Observational Model: Case Control, Primary Purpose: Screening, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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