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Ln-AISI, Ln-NAR, and Ln-MAR biomarkers linked to cataract surgery history in NHANES and clinical cohort

Ln-AISI, Ln-NAR, and Ln-MAR biomarkers linked to cataract surgery history in NHANES and clinical coh…
Photo by Ayanda Kunene / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Note the association between inflammatory biomarkers and cataract surgery history, recognizing modest predictive utility.

This publication describes a review and validation study utilizing a cohort design. The population included participants with complete data from the 2005–2008 NHANES cycles and a clinical cohort. The setting combined NHANES database and hospital-based clinical data. The total sample size was 8,194 participants from NHANES.

The exposure involved inflammatory and nutritional biomarkers, specifically Ln-AISI, Ln-NAR, and Ln-MAR. The comparator consisted of the non-cataract group in the clinical cohort and the general population in NHANES. The primary outcome measured was cataract surgery history prevalence.

A linear positive association was observed between the log-transformed biomarkers and cataract surgery history prevalence. Ln-MAR showed the strongest association among the three markers with a predictive utility AUC of 0.592. In the clinical cohort, the cataract group displayed elevated MAR and NAR levels but reduced ALI levels compared to the non-cataract group. All p-values for interaction were > 0.05.

Safety data regarding adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, and tolerability were not reported. A key limitation noted is that the discriminatory ability of all three indices remained modest. Follow-up duration was not reported.

Strategies aimed at mitigating systemic inflammation and optimizing nutritional balance may hold promise for cataract prevention. However, the evidence supports an association between inflammatory biomarkers and cataracts rather than causation. Validation from NHANES database and clinical studies supports the findings. Clinicians should note the modest discriminatory ability.

Study Details

Study typeCohort
EvidenceLevel 3
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
IntroductionCataract-associated blindness has increasingly emerged as a major public health issue. Although inflammatory and nutritional status are well-established contributors to various systemic diseases, their associations with cataracts remain underexplored. This study leveraged the NHANES database to investigate the associations between inflammatory and nutritional biomarkers and cataract surgery history prevalence, with subsequent validation using hospital-based clinical data.MethodsParticipants with complete data from the 2005–2008 NHANES cycles were included. Baseline characteristics were first compared between groups. Multivariate logistic regression and restricted cubic spline (RCS) analyses were then employed to assess the associations between inflammation-nutrition indices and cataract surgery history prevalence. Subgroup analyses and interaction tests were conducted to evaluate consistency across diverse populations. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis determined the predictive utility for cataract surgery history prevalence. Sensitivity analyses were performed to bolster the robustness of the results. Finally, findings were validated using clinical cohort data.ResultsThe study included 8,194 participants. After adjustment for pertinent confounders, log-transformed AISI (Ln-AISI), NAR (Ln-NAR), and MAR (Ln-MAR) exhibited a linear positive association with cataract surgery history prevalence. Subgroup analyses demonstrated no significant interactions in strata defined by age, gender, smoking status, alcohol consumption, hypertension, diabetes, and body mass index (all p-values for interaction > 0.05). Two sensitivity analyses confirmed the robustness of these associations. ROC analysis revealed that Ln-MAR (AUC = 0.592) showed the strongest association with cataract surgery history prevalence among the three markers, although the discriminatory ability of all three indices remained modest. In the clinical cohort, the cataract group displayed elevated MAR and NAR levels but reduced ALI levels compared to the non-cataract group.ConclusionThis study demonstrates positive correlations between MAR, NAR, and AISI with cataract surgery history prevalence, underscoring the intimate link between systemic inflammation, nutritional status, and cataract pathogenesis. Strategies aimed at mitigating systemic inflammation and optimizing nutritional balance may hold promise for cataract prevention.
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