
The most important ophthalmology research updates, delivered directly to you.

The most important ophthalmology research updates, delivered directly to you.
In this week’s issue
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Ophthalmology
Something for “All of Us”: Association between glaucoma and dementia
Cup to disc and cognitive risk. Both considered neurodegenerative disorders, glaucoma and dementia have been inconsistently associated for nearly two decades. Given this fraught association, additional research to tease apart modifying risk factors has been needed. Investigators in Pennsylvania leveraged the NIH “All of Us” dataset to explore association between the two conditions. In this retrospective, longitudinal analysis, more than 45,000 subjects were included over a median follow-up of approximately 6.5 years to examine associations with additional analysis of subtypes and the strongest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's, the APOE genotype. After matching controls and excluding those with pre-existing dementia, glaucoma was associated with a significantly increased risk of all-cause dementia. When stratified by subtype, primary open-angle glaucoma and normal-tension glaucoma demonstrated particularly strong associations with Alzheimer’s, whereas angle-closure glaucoma did not retain a statistically significant link after adjustment. Finally, elevated dementia risk persisted across common variants (ε2ε3, ε3ε3, ε3ε4), suggesting that the glaucoma-dementia association is not confined to individuals with high genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease. This study reinforces a growing body of literature positioning glaucoma as more than an isolated optic neuropathy, supporting the concept of shared neurodegenerative or microvascular mechanisms between the eye and brain. While causality cannot be inferred, glaucoma may represent either a marker of systemic neurodegeneration or a condition sharing overlapping pathogenic pathways.
JAMA Ophthalmology
Deep learning diagnoses pulmonary disease using retinal photos
The eyes are a window to cardiopulmonary disease? Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and pulmonary hypertension (PH) are related causes of morbidity and mortality in premature infants, yet their diagnosis remains challenging. A BPD diagnosis primarily relies on non-specific demographic data, whereas a PH diagnosis requires invasive procedures, including cardiac catheterization. To address these limitations, this proof-of-concept study developed deep-learning algorithms trained on retinal fundus photos (RFPs) obtained from routine retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) screening at ≤34 weeks of postmenstrual age from across 7 NICUs to identify biomarkers for predicting BPH and PH. Model performance was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). For BPD, a multimodal approach combining demographic and imaging data improved predictive performance compared with demographics-only (AUC = 0.72) and imaging-only models. For PH, retinal imaging alone was diagnostic, outperforming the demographics-only model and provided no added predictive value in an integrated model. This study demonstrates that retinal images are highly diagnostic of cardiopulmonary disease, supporting their use for earlier, non-invasive risk stratification of BPD and PH in preterm infants.
American Journal of Ophthalmology (AJO)
Reproductive life stages shape noninfectious uveitis activity in women
From the first to final period, your eyes stay “period-ically” involved. Noninfectious uveitis is a major cause of vision loss, with unpredictable flares of intraocular inflammation. Because hormonal states are known to influence immune function, researchers have begun to question whether different stages of a woman’s reproductive life may modify uveitis activity. In this study, investigators retrospectively analyzed data from 700 patients in the AIDA Network Uveitis Registry (2020-2025), comparing uveitis flare frequency and inflammation severity across age-defined reproductive stages (pre-pubertal, early puberty, late puberty, reproductive, perimenopause, and postmenopausal), with males included as controls. Uveitis activity peaked during early puberty for both sexes, with a clear second peak observed in perimenopausal women. Children and early adolescents had more severe anterior segment inflammation and were more likely to require systemic immunosuppressive therapy, while posterior segment inflammation markers remained stable across stages. Reproductive life stage appears to modify uveitis activity, suggesting clinicians should consider hormonal milestones in clinical management and treatment planning.
British Journal of Ophthalmology
How well can large language models interpret retinal imaging?
Teaching artificial intelligence (AI) to read the retina is harder than it looks. As AI tools rapidly evolve, careful evaluation is needed before they are integrated into clinical care. In this study, researchers assessed the performance of eight leading multimodal large language models (LLMs) including GPT-4.5, Gemini 2.0 Pro, Claude 3.7 Sonnet, and others using 100 fundus images representing a broad spectrum of ophthalmic diseases. Across models, rhegmatogenous pathologies were identified most accurately, while myopic maculopathy proved particularly challenging, with mean accuracy below 25%. GPT-4.5 demonstrated the highest overall diagnostic accuracy (65.0%), closely followed by Gemini 2.0 Pro (63.0%). Lower-performing models not only showed reduced accuracy but also frequently declined to provide diagnoses. Overall, these findings suggest that while current LLMs show promise in interpreting fundus images, their limitations highlight the need for further development before routine clinical deployment.
Frontiers in Immunology
Gut-eye connection: Gut microbiome’s impact on uveitis
What you eat affects what you see? Progranulin (PGRN), a protein associated with TNFα antagonism, has been found to be protective in some autoimmune diseases (such as rheumatoid arthritis) and pathogenic in others (such as lupus nephritis). This study investigated the role of PGRN in experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU). Uveitis was induced in wild-type (WT) and PGRN-deficient mice. PGRN-deficient mice had significantly greater clinical uveitis scores compared to WT, more severe chorioretinal lesions, inflammatory cellular infiltration, and retinal folding. PGRN-deficient mice demonstrated significantly reduced gut microbial species and altered composition compared to WT. Chlamydiae phylum, which was present in PGRN-deficient mice but absent in WT, was positively associated with uveitis severity. These findings suggest PGRN may be protective against uveitis, and that PGRN deficiency may increase susceptibility to chlamydial colonization.
Routine Preoperative Medical Testing Before Cataract Surgery
Is more always better? Or, more money, more problems? In this study from 2000, preoperative medical testing was compared to no preoperative medical testing prior to age-related cataract surgery in 19,250 total cataract surgeries. They randomized patients to a no testing and a routine testing group, and assessed for medical adverse events during and within 7 days of the surgery.
Key Points
Overall, the study is a landmark study because it showed that preoperative medical testing before age-related cataract surgery does not provide any significant benefit or improve postoperative outcomes. Further studies and reviews have instead showed that it primarily increases medical costs for patients with age-related cataracts.
A case of mistaken identity in the pediatric orbit
JAMA Ophthalmology
A benign exterior doesn't always exclude malignant pathology. Extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) is a rare form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma that most commonly manifests in sites such as the stomach, ocular adnexa, lungs, salivary glands, and skin. The median age at diagnosis is about 60 years, making pediatric presentations exceptionally uncommon. In this case, a young boy presented to clinic with a painless, slow-growing conjunctival mass (Figure A). On exam, the lesion was smooth, well-demarcated and non-tender without associated proptosis or systemic findings. Its initial appearance favored a differential diagnosis of benign etiology such as pyogenic granuloma or chalazion. Despite treatment with topical corticosteroids, the mass persisted and continued to enlarge, prompting complete excisional biopsy. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry findings were consistent with extranodal marginal zone B-cell MALT lymphoma (Figure B), and subsequent molecular testing identified a pathogenic PRDM1 gene variant. The patient was followed by pediatric oncology thereafter, however no further adjuvant treatment was indicated in the absence of disseminated disease and the patient continued to remain disease-free at 6-months. This case illustrates a rare pediatric presentation of an indolent lymphoma more commonly encountered in adults, thus highlights the importance of maintaining a high suspicion in seemingly benign pathologies refractory to treatment.
A 17-year-old male presents to the ED with blunt trauma to the left orbit after a physical altercation. He noticed diplopia immediately after impact. He now feels pain with upward gaze, nausea, and vomiting. On exam, there is minimal periorbital edema and restriction of supraduction in the left eye. Visual acuity, intraocular pressure, and pupillary reflexes are normal. On slit lamp, there are a few small sub-conjunctival hemorrhages in the left eye. CT imaging reveals an orbital floor fracture with entrapment, as shown in the figure.
Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
A. Observation and repeat imaging in 1 week
B. High-dose corticosteroids
C. Urgent surgical repair
D. Broad-spectrum antibiotics
E. Patch the affected eye
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