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1From the Centre for Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology, Westmead Millennium Instiute, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia; the 2Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; the 3Collaborative Health Studies Coordinating Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; the 4Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin; the 5Centre for Eye Research Australia, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia; and the 6Departments of Community, Occupational, and Family Medicine and 7Ophthalmology, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. Data from the population-based Blue Mountains Eye Study were used to compare the predictive information in models using AVR with models using arteriolar and venular calibers directly. Determination was made of how the apparent relationship between vessel caliber and two systemic outcomes (blood pressure [BP] and white blood cell count [WBC]) was influenced by the choice of regression model. These findings were interpreted with reference to the known biological relationship among vessel calibers, BP, and WBC.
RESULTS. Models using arteriolar and venular calibers directly had more predictive information than models using AVR. The apparent relationship of vessel caliber to BP and WBC differed substantially, depending on the model chosen. For example, after adjustment for age, sex, and other covariates, decreasing venular caliber was associated with higher systolic BP when modeled separately, but was associated with lower systolic BP when modeled simultaneously with arteriolar caliber.
CONCLUSIONS. The findings suggest AVR provides less information with regards to predicting systemic outcomes than its two components. Modeling arteriolar and venular calibers separately could be biased by confounding, while modeling both simultaneously appears to provide unbiased, biologically plausible results. The use of this approach is recommended in future research relating retinal vascular caliber to systemic or ocular outcomes.
Recent studies in which digital imaging methods were used have allowed retinal vascular caliber to be measured more precisely from retinal photographs than from ophthalmoscopic examination. In these studies, although measurements of individual retinal arteriolar and venular calibers were made from fundus photographs, the AVR continued to be used as an index of severity of generalized arteriolar narrowing.1 4 5 6 7
The AVR, as a relative measure that combines information from both arms of the circulatory system, has the advantage of controlling for magnification differences from camera lenses and refractive error.8 When a low AVR was found to be associated with aging,9 cigarette smoking,10 current and past BP,4 11 open-angle glaucoma12 and cardiovascular outcomes such as incident stroke13 14 and coronary heart disease,15 the associations were initially thought to reflect generalized arteriolar narrowing, rather than changes in venular calibers.
New analyses, however, have pointed out weaknesses and limitations of using the AVR.16 17 First, there are statistical reasons why ratios such as the AVR may capture less information with respect to prediction of outcomes than would consideration of the numerator and denominator separately.18 Second, studying the associations of arteriolar and venular calibers separately may shed light on underlying pathophysiological mechanisms. Retinal arteriolar and venular calibers themselves carry different prognostic information,17 18 and use of a summary measure such as AVR may lead to incorrect inferences.17 18 For example, if both arteriolar and venular calibers are associated with the study outcome in the same direction (such as narrowing of both with increasing BP), the magnitude of the association between arteriolar caliber and increasing BP may be masked substantially, as AVR will not appear to change much with BP. In contrast, if both vessel calibers are associated with the study outcome but in opposite directions, AVR may substantially exaggerate or mask the apparent magnitude of the association with arteriolar caliber, as has been shown in several recent studies.17 19 Clearly, further understanding of appropriate methods to analyze retinal vessel caliber, including whether the AVR is an appropriate summary indicator, is needed.
One alternative used in the Rotterdam study and subsequently in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) was to analyze associations of retinal arteriolar and venular caliber separately.17 20 However, neither study explored whether this approach provides more valid information than the AVR. Moreover, whether modeling arteriolar and venular caliber in separate models provides valid conclusions regarding their associations is uncertain, as arteriolar and venular caliber are highly correlated. The purpose of the present study was to explore these issues using data from the Blue Mountains Eye Study.
| Materials and Methods |
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We analyzed the association of retinal vascular caliber to two outcomes: systolic BP (SBP) and white blood cell count (WBC). The association between narrower arterioles and higher BP is well established, and there is good evidence suggesting that wider venular caliber is related to systemic inflammation.17 23
For this study, we performed the following. First we tested whether AVR predicts outcome as well as arteriolar and venular calibers jointly. Next we constructed models assessing the relationship between vessel calibers and the two outcomes. We compared regression coefficients from models containing a single term (either arteriolar or venular caliber) compared with coefficients from models containing both terms simultaneously. We interpreted these coefficients based on prior biological knowledge of the likely relationships between vessel calibers and the two outcomes.
The Blue Mountains Eye Study has been described.5 At the baseline examination (19921994), color retinal photographs (30°) of the macula and other retinal fields of both eyes were taken with a fundus camera after pupil dilation (model FF3; Carl Zeiss Meditec GmbH, Oberkochen, Germany). Detailed grading methods have been described5 and are identical with those used in large population-based studies.24 In brief, we used a computer-assisted method to measure the internal caliber of retinal arterioles and venules from digitized retinal images, which were then summarized with published formulas7 25 with correction for magnification.3 8 The formulas take into account branching patterns and allow all measured vessel calibers in an eye to be summarized as an index representing the mean arteriolar or venular caliber of that eye and AVR to be calculated from these indices. An AVR of 1.0 suggests that arteriolar calibers are, on average, the same as venular calibers in that eye, whereas a lower AVR suggests either relatively narrower arterioles compared with venules, or relatively wider venules, compared with arterioles.
We measured WBC, fasting plasma glucose, and total serum cholesterol in fasting blood samples within 4 hours of blood collection. We measured the SPB and diastolic BP (DBP) of each participant with the same mercury sphygmomanometer with appropriate adult cuff size, after seating the participant for at least 10 minutes. Body mass index (BMI) was calculated from height and weight measured at the same examination, and smoking status was determined from self-report.
To determine whether AVR contained all (or most) of the predictive information with regard to outcomes provided by arteriolar and venular calibers, we noted that use of AVR as a predictor assumes that a multiplicative model of the form below holds.
![]() | (1) |
is a random error term with mean = 1. The equivalent multiplicative model using arteriolar and venular calibers instead of AVR would be
![]() | (2) |
We then expressed equation 2 as
![]() | (3) |
Letting Y' = ln(Y), a' = ln(a), A' = ln(A), V' = ln(V) and
' = ln(
) gives
![]() | (4) |
In the same way, equation 1 can be expressed as
![]() | (5) |
To test the null hypothesis that the model with AVR contains all the predictive information of the model with arteriolar and venular calibers together, we modeled equations 4 and 5 using SBP and WBC as outcomes, and computed the F statistic:
![]() | (6) |
Next, we assessed the relationship between arteriolar and venular caliber (explanatory variables) and SBP and WBC (outcome variables) in different regression modelsmodels 7, 8, and 9: where we adjusted for age and sex while entering AVR, arteriolar caliber, or venular caliber, respectively, into three separate models; model 10: age- and sex-adjusted, entering both arteriolar and venular caliber simultaneously into the same model; models 11, 12, and 13: the variables in models 7, 8, and 9 additionally adjusted for BMI, fasting plasma glucose, total serum cholesterol, and smoking status; and model 14: the variables in model 10 additionally adjusted for BMI, fasting plasma glucose, total serum cholesterol, and smoking status.
To explore the possibility of collinearity,26 given the correlation between arteriolar and venular calibers in this population (r = 0.58; Liew G, unpublished data, 2006), we compared regression coefficients, standard errors (in the form of confidence intervals; [CIs]) and variance inflation factors (VIFs).26 VIFs are a measure of the degree of collinearity, with high values indicating severe collinearity. If severe collinearity (VIF close to 10) were present, we would expect to find unstable regression coefficients and large CIs.
| Results |
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Table 1 shows the results of testing whether AVR provides the same predictive information as arteriolar and venular calibers together. For both outcomes of SBP and WBC, the F statistic is significant (P < 0.0001), indicating that models with AVR are substantially different from models with both arteriolar and venular calibers. Although the R2s of all three models were low, those of the models with both arteriolar and venular calibers were more than twice the R2 of the models with AVR (0.069 vs. 0.029 for SBP, and 0.015 vs. 0.007 for WBC, respectively), demonstrating that models with both arteriolar and venular calibers together predicted these two outcomes better than models using AVR.
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| Discussion |
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Second, as an alternative to the AVR, one could either model these variables separately, or include them simultaneously in the same model. It is unclear which method provides less biased results. On the one hand, modeling vessel calibers separately may give estimates confounded by the effects of the fellow component variable. The main determinant of venular caliber is in fact arteriolar caliber, with arteriolar caliber explaining approximately 30% of the variability in venular caliber (Liew G, unpublished data, 2006), presumably due to their shared genetic and environmental determinants (e.g., diet, health, and growth) as well as magnification artifacts.24 On the other hand, including both components in the same model would provide an adjustment that would avoid this confounding effect, but this approach has not been used previously, and there are no data on its merits. Thus, currently there is no consensus as to the most appropriate approach for analyzing the relationship of retinal vessel calibers and systemic outcomes: Should one continue to use the AVR on its own, analyze vessel calibers separately, or include both vessel calibers simultaneously in the same model?
In the examples we used in this report, when arteriolar or venular caliber terms were entered separately into different regression models, we found that both caliber terms were strongly and negatively associated with higher systolic and DBP, after adjusting for age, sex, and other covariates. In contrast, when both arteriolar and venular caliber terms were entered simultaneously into the same model, decreasing arteriolar caliber, but increasing venular caliber, was associated with higher systolic and DBP. Similarly, when modeled separately, both increasing arteriolar and venular caliber terms were strongly associated with higher WBC, but when modeled simultaneously, venular caliber remained strongly and positively associated with higher WBC, whereas the positive association with arteriolar caliber attenuated considerably and became nonsignificant.
The apparent negative association of narrower venules with higher BP when single variables are entered into separate models is most likely a consequence of the correlation between arteriolar and venular caliber (a person with narrowed arterioles is also likely to have relatively narrowed venules). When we examined the independent effects of each variable by including both in the same model, we found that wider, not narrower, venular caliber was associated with higher SBP. The inverse association of venular caliber with BP is consistent with evidence indicating that wider venular caliber may be partly a response to chronic retinal hypoxia or hypoperfusion27 28 from chronic hypertensive damage to the microcirculation. Hence, the apparent relationship between narrower venules and higher SBP when venules were modeled separately is probably a biased finding resulting from confounding by arteriolar caliber, which is strongly associated with both BP and venular caliber. Similarly, the apparent positive association between arteriolar caliber and WBC in the age-sex adjusted model without venular diameter is likely to be a result of confounding by venular caliber.
It should be noted that computer-assisted measurement of retinal vessel calibers from retinal photographs measures only the width of the reflective erythrocyte column and underestimates the true internal vessel caliber, as it does not measure the surrounding clear plasma zone (<10% of the internal diameter). However, we believe erythrocyte column width is a good surrogate measure of internal vessel caliber as it appears to be proportional to internal retinal vessel caliber in animal studies, given that the ratio of the width of the plasma layer to internal vessel caliber for both arterioles and venules stays constant.29
The potential clinical application of this method to evaluate retinal vessel calibers, and the contribution from the assessment of these vessels to cardiovascular risk stratification, is promising,1 30 though much work is still needed before it can be implemented in routine clinical practice.
In conclusion, using examples from our population-based data, we proposed several issues that deserve attention when using ratios in analysis. Arbitrary functions of multiple variables, such as AVR, should not be used in regression modeling unless it can be shown that there is little or no loss of information in using them compared with the inclusion in the model of the component variables that make up the arbitrary function.18 Based on prior biological knowledge of the likely associations between BP and arteriolar and venular calibers, we believe that there is a possibility of confounding by the other fellow component variable, when analyzing the two correlated vessel calibers in separate models. We thus recommend that models including both arteriolar and venular caliber terms together should be considered in situations where possible confounding from the other vessel caliber is likely to existfor example, when assessing the relationship of vessel calibers to systemic or ocular outcomes. This approach would adjust for possible confounding from the other correlated variable, and confirm the robustness of findings from models that include vessel calibers separately. Our propositions must be explored and confirmed in other datasets.
| Footnotes |
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Submitted for publication June 16, 2006; revised August 12, 2006; accepted October 3, 2006.
Disclosure: G. Liew, None; A.R. Sharrett, None; R. Kronmal, None; R. Klein, None; T.Y. Wong, None; P. Mitchell, None; A. Kifley, None; J.J. Wang, None
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Jie Jin Wang, Centre for Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Sydney, Westmead Hospital, Hawkesbury Road, Westmead, NSW Australia, 2145; jiejin_wang{at}wmi.usyd.edu.au.
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