Researchers examined data on 74,044 women with cataracts, including
41,735 who underwent cataract surgery. Compared to women who didn’t
get operations, those who did were 60% less likely to die from all
causes during the study period.
“The results of this study suggest that cataract surgery may have
benefits beyond improving vision even in patients who are elderly or
sick,” said senior study author Dr. Anne Coleman, a researcher at
the Fielding School of Public Health at the University of
California, Los Angeles.
Cataracts often develop with age, and by age 80 roughly half of
Americans either have cataracts or have had cataract surgery,
according to the National Eye Institute.
Women in the current study were 71 years old, on average, and were
part of the Women’s Health Initiative, a study that has been running
for more than two decades and collects information on demographics,
medical conditions and lifestyle habits.
From 1993 to 2013, a total of 6,878 women who had cataract surgery
died, as did 6,123 women with cataracts who didn’t get the
procedure.
This translates into a mortality rate from all causes of 1.5 deaths
per 100 women each year in the surgery group and 2.6 deaths per 100
women each year in the other group, researchers report online
October 26 in JAMA Ophthalmology.
With surgery, women also had a 37% to 69% reduced risk of death due
to pulmonary, accidental, infectious, neurologic and vascular
diseases, and cancer, the study also found.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how cataract surgery might help people live longer. It’s possible
that other factors influence both risk of death and likelihood of
getting cataract surgery, for example.
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“We cannot say for certain if people with cataracts who pass away
are dying from factors specifically related to their vision loss
(e.g. a fatal car accident from not being able to see well),”
Coleman said by email.
“But we believe people with decreased vision have decreased overall
functioning with daily activities such as exercising, taking
medicine and going to doctor appointments, all of which may be
related to overall lifespan,” Coleman added.
Another limitation of the study is that because it only included
women, it’s not clear how surgery would influence survival odds for
men, the authors note.
However, several previous studies have linked cataract surgery to
lower odds of premature death for both men and women, Coleman said.
Cataracts can’t be prevented, but the study results do suggest that
there are benefits to treating them, said Dr. Justine Smith, author
of an accompanying editorial and a researcher at Flinders University
in Adelaide, Australia.
“This research argues for ready access to cataract surgery for older
women,” Smith said by email. “In a similar vein, this research
argues for regular eye checks for older people.”
SOURCES: http://bit.ly/2zMNrSp and http://bit.ly/2zKpyKV
JAMA Ophthalmol 2017.
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