Health: High levels of air pollution can increase your risk of macular degeneration 

Living in an area with high levels of air pollution can increase your risk of developing macular degeneration and going BLIND, study warns

  • Experts from the UK studied 15,954 people aged 40–69 with no vision issues
  • They monitored them for the onset of age-related macular degeneration (AMD)
  • And they compared this to the subjects’ average annual air pollution exposure
  • They found that higher levels of pollution increased the risk of AMD by 8 per cent

Your risk of developing macular degeneration and going blind is increased by living in an area with a high level of air pollution, a study has warned.

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a progressive form of vision loss  that is the leading cause of blindness among UK adults aged 50 and over.

Known risk factors for AMD — alongside increasing age — include certain genetic factors and being a smoker.

Researchers from the UK studied data on 15,954 people — each of whom was aged 40–69 at the start of the study and initially reported no vision issues.

They monitored them for the development of AMD — and compared outcomes with the average level of air pollution where they lived. 

They found that greater concentrations of air pollution were associated with up to an 8 per cent increase in the likelihood of developing macular degeneration.

Your risk of developing macular degeneration and going blind is increased by living in an area with a high level of air pollution, a study has warned

Data for the study was collected by the UK Biobank, a large-scale database containing detailed genetic and health information on half-a-million participants.

Of the participants, 52,602 had their eyes examined and assessed for the structural changes in the thickness and numbers of receptors in the retina which are indicative of age-related macular degeneration.

The study used estimates of the average annual levels of air pollution at each subject’s home address, considering pollutants such as fine particles (or PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide and nitrogen oxides which mainly come from vehicle exhausts.

The researchers found that just over 1 per cent of the study cohort — 1,286 people — ended up being diagnosed with age-related macular degeneration.

Once factors such as lifestyle and underlying health conditions were taken into account, the team found that participants exposed to higher concentrations of PM2.5 were 8 per cent more likely to develop AMD.

Exposure to PM2.5 and other pollutants was also found to be associated with changes in the structure of the subjects’ retinas.

However, the team noted, the study was an observational one which did not intervene with people’s lives and could not prove that pollution caused sight loss.

But it echoes previous findings, they said, which have suggested that higher exposure to air pollution may make retinal cells more vulnerable and thereby increase one’s risk of AMD. 

‘Overall, our findings suggest that ambient air pollution, especially fine (particulate matter) or those of combustion-related particles, may affect AMD risk,’ the researchers said.

‘Our findings add to the growing evidence of the damaging effects of ambient air pollution, even in the setting of relative low exposure.’

Molecular ophthalmologist Chris Inglehearn of the University of Leeds, who was not involved in the present study, said that the paper — and another from Taiwan — have both shown a link between air pollution and age-related macular degeneration.

While the studies have not proven that pollution is causing AMD, he said, ‘the fact that these two independent studies reach similar conclusions gives greater confidence that the link they make is real.’

‘These studies provide further evidence that links air pollution with detrimental impacts on human health,’ he concluded.

‘Age-related macular degeneration is the most common cause of sight loss in the developed world and so this finding is significant,’ added Robert MacLaren, an ophthalmology expert from the University of Oxford.

‘Participants in the study had an average age of around 60 and this small increase risk of 8 per cent is likely to be compounded further over ensuing decades.’

The full findings of the study were published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.