# The Relation of Corneal Arcus With Cardiovascular Diseases: A Systematic Review

**Authors:** Haidar Bonajmah, Faisal Aljassar, Ali Bulbanat, Rashed Almutairi

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.99615 · Cureus · 2025-12-19

## TL;DR

This review examines whether corneal arcus is a reliable indicator of cardiovascular disease and finds it reflects lipid exposure more than a direct risk factor.

## Contribution

The study systematically evaluates the consistency and clinical relevance of corneal arcus as a cardiovascular risk marker across diverse populations.

## Key findings

- Arcus prevalence increases with age and is higher in men.
- Prospective studies show arcus predicts incident events in younger men and some Asian populations but lacks general prognostic value.
- Arcus reflects cumulative lipid exposure rather than independent cardiovascular risk.

## Abstract

The prognostic value of corneal arcus (arcus senilis) for cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains debated. We evaluated associations of arcus with cardiometabolic risk, prevalent CVD, and incident events, and summarized how consistently studies adjusted for standard risk factors.

We systematically reviewed observational studies (1960-2017) from Asia, Europe, and North America. Designs included cross-sectional, case-control, and prospective cohorts. Risk of bias was appraised using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (cohort/case-control) and the Joanna Briggs Institute checklist (cross-sectional).

Twelve studies met the inclusion criteria. The prevalence of arcus increased with age and was higher in men. Cross-sectional and case-control evidence showed consistent associations with atherogenic lipid profiles and a higher burden of prevalent CVD. Prospective findings were mixed: arcus predicted incident events in targeted subgroups (notably younger men and some Asian male populations) but offered limited independent prognostic value and minimal incremental discrimination in general, older populations once age, sex, and lipids were considered. Overall risk of bias was low in most cohorts; moderate ratings reflected limited confounder control, non-slit-lamp exposure assessment, or sampling constraints.

Corneal arcus appears to primarily reflect cumulative lipid exposure. In adults under 50 years or select higher-risk men, its presence should prompt lipid evaluation and risk review; however, its low sensitivity means the absence of arcus does not exclude CVD.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cardiovascular disease (MONDO:0004995)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** atherogenic (MESH:D050197), Corneal Arcus (MESH:D001112), CVD (MESH:D002318)
- **Chemicals:** lipid (MESH:D008055)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12812267/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12812267