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    Demographic and lifestyle risk factors of dry eye disease subtypes: A cross-sectional study.

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    Author
    Wolffsohn, James S
    Wang, Michael T M
    Vidal-Rohr, Maria
    Menduni, Francesco
    Dhallu, Sandeep
    Ipek, Tugce
    Acar, Duygu
    Recchioni, Alberto cc
    France, Alex
    Kingsnorth, Alec
    Craig, Jennifer P
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    Affiliation
    Aston University; The University of Auckland; Thea Pharmaceuticals; Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust
    Publication date
    2021-05-15
    Subject
    Ophthalmology
    
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    Abstract
    Purpose: To evaluate demographic and lifestyle factors associated with aqueous deficient and evaporative dry eye disease. Methods: A total of 1125 general public visitors (707 females, mean ± SD age, 33 ± 21, range 5-90 years) at the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition were recruited in a cross-sectional study. A demographic and lifestyle factor questionnaire was administered, and dry eye symptomology (DEQ-5 score), ocular surface characteristics (conjunctival hyperaemia, and infrared meibography), and tear film parameters (tear meniscus height, non-invasive breakup time, and lipid layer grade) were evaluated for the left eye of each participant within a single session. The diagnostic criteria for dry eye disease subtypes were adapted from the rapid non-invasive dry eye assessment algorithm. Results: Overall, 428 (38%) participants fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for dry eye disease, 161 (14%) with aqueous deficient dry eye disease, and 339 (30%) with evaporative dry eye disease. Multivariate logistic regression demonstrated that advancing age, female sex, reduced sleep duration, higher psychological stress, and poorer self-perceived health status were independently associated with aqueous deficient dry eye disease (all p < 0.05). Significant risk factors for evaporative dry eye disease included advancing age, East and South Asian ethnicity, contact lens wear, increased digital device screen exposure, higher psychological stress, and poorer self-perceived health status (all p < 0.05). Conclusions: Both subtypes of dry eye disease were associated with several unique and shared demographic and lifestyle factors. The findings of this study could inform future research design investigating the utility of targeted screening and risk factor modification for the prevention and management of dry eye disease.
    Citation
    Wolffsohn JS, Wang MTM, Vidal-Rohr M, Menduni F, Dhallu S, Ipek T, Acar D, Recchioni A, France A, Kingsnorth A, Craig JP. Demographic and lifestyle risk factors of dry eye disease subtypes: A cross-sectional study. Ocul Surf. 2021 Jul;21:58-63.
    Type
    Article
    Other
    Handle
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14200/5646
    DOI
    10.1016/j.jtos.2021.05.001
    PMID
    33965652
    Journal
    The Ocular Surface
    Publisher
    Elsevier
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1016/j.jtos.2021.05.001
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Research (Articles)

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