Summary: | A subset of ophthalmic imaging examination results from 334 patients were subjected to reanalysis to identify a specific group of patients with pigment epithelial detachment (PED) in at least one eye. Overall, we found a subgroup of 47 patients manifesting PED and studied their genotypes in comparison to those of patients with age-related macular degeneration without PED and healthy controls. We established a polygenic risk score that allowed the explanation of 16.3% of the variation within the disease. The highest predictive value was achieved for a model consisting of six non-coding variants: rs760306 (<i>BEST1</i>), rs148662546 (<i>BEST1</i>), rs11569560 (<i>C3</i>), rs74600252 (<i>GUCA1B</i>), rs2240688 (<i>PROM1</i>), and rs185507582 (<i>TCF4</i>). The risk of PED occurrence was found to be the highest in the first tercile, showing a 7.89-fold higher risk compared to the third tercile for AMD without PED (95% CI: 2.87; 21.71, <i>p</i> < 0.001) and a 7.22-fold higher risk compared to the healthy controls (95% CI: 2.60; 20.06, <i>p</i> < 0.001). In addition, we focused on rare variants in targeted genes. The rare variants’ burden was compared among the groups, but no statistical significance was observed in the number of rare variants, predicted functional effects, or pathogenicity classification.
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