12 7

Cited 0 times in

Cited 0 times in

Oculomics of lipid metabolism: A scoping review across anterior and posterior segment diseases

Authors
 Kim, Heesuk  ;  Joe, Byung-Hyun  ;  Nam, Dongjin  ;  Yoo, Tae Keun 
Citation
 SCIENCE PROGRESS, Vol.109(2), 2026-04 
Article Number
 368504261453276 
Journal Title
SCIENCE PROGRESS
ISSN
 0036-8504 
Issue Date
2026-04
MeSH
Biomarkers / metabolism ; Dyslipidemias* / metabolism ; Eye Diseases* / metabolism ; Humans ; Lipid Metabolism* ; Macular Degeneration / metabolism
Keywords
oculomics ; dyslipidemia ; cholesterol ; drusen ; diabetic retinopathy
Abstract
Dyslipidemia comprises interacting disturbances in lipids and lipoproteins that track with metabolic status, vascular biology, and inflammation. Ocular imaging offers scalable, quantifiable phenotypes to interrogate lipid-related pathways and to develop oculomics. We conducted a scoping review to map evidence linking dyslipidemia and lipid-related biomarkers with ocular phenotypes across the ocular surface, lens, macula, retinal microvasculature, and vascular occlusive disease, and to consider implications for AI-based risk modeling. We searched PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science, supplemented by reference screening, and charted lipid exposures such as LDL-C, non-HDL-C, apoB/apoA-I, and the triglyceride-glucose index. The biologically grounded patterns were observed in macular disease, where cholesterol- and apolipoprotein-related material within the RPE-Bruch's membrane complex and drusen-related phenotypes support lipid-handling and innate immune pathways in age-related macular degeneration. Retinal vascular phenotypes showed generally consistent signals compatible with endothelial stress and microvascular remodeling. Epidemiologic associations were apparent in metabolically co-traveling conditions such as meibomian gland dysfunction and diabetic retinopathy, in which triglyceride-rich dyslipidemia and insulin resistance markers were often more informative than LDL-C alone and associations were often non-linear or interaction-dependent. By contrast, findings for glaucoma and cataract were modest and inconsistent, while vascular occlusive phenotypes clustered with broader atherosclerotic risk. Statin associations varied by outcome and were vulnerable to confounding. Predicting individual lipid analytes from retinal images appears limited, whereas integrated ocular signatures may support cardiovascular risk stratification. Future studies should refine phenotype definitions, model non-linearity, account for lipid-lowering therapy, and prospectively validate multimodal oculomics and AI across devices and populations.
Files in This Item:
93199.pdf Download
DOI
10.1177/00368504261453276
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Ophthalmology (안과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Kim, Heesuk(김희석)
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/212678
사서에게 알리기
  feedback

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse

Links