Kurtz Daniel, Hyman Leslie, Gwiazda Jane E, Manny Ruth, Dong Li Ming, Wang Ying, Scheiman Mitchell
New England College of Optometry, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2007 Feb;48(2):562-70. doi: 10.1167/iovs.06-0408.
The present study investigated the relationship between parental refractive error and myopia progression in their offspring and the interaction between parental ametropia and the effects of wearing progressive-addition (PALs) or single-vision (SVLs) lenses on the progression of myopia in children enrolled in the Correction of Myopia Evaluation Trial (COMET).
The progression of myopia in a subset of COMET children (N= 232; 49% of initial group) was defined as the difference in mean spherical equivalent refraction of both eyes obtained by cycloplegic autorefraction between the baseline and 5-year visit. Parental refractions were obtained by noncycloplegic autorefraction (81%) or from recent eye examination records (19%).
The number of myopic parents (mean spherical equivalent refraction </=-0.75 D) was directly related to myopia progression among children wearing SVLs: myopia in children with no (zero) myopic parents progressed (mean +/- SE) -1.81 +/- 0.18 D and with one myopic parent, -2.04 +/- 0.13) D; these amounts were significantly less than the progression of children with two myopic parents (-2.59 +/- 0.19 D). In the PAL group, progression was not significantly related to the number of myopic parents and was -2.01 D overall. Among children with two myopic parents, progression was -2.00 D in the PAL group, significantly less than the progression of children wearing SVLs (P = 0.03). Among children with zero or one myopic parent, progression did not differ significantly between the lens groups. When the data were adjusted for covariates, the interaction between treatment effect and number of myopic parents was significant (P = 0.01). Over the 5-year study period, axial length increased 0.93 +/- 0.07 mm in children with two myopic parents wearing PALs and 1.18 +/- 0.07 mm in children with two myopic parents wearing SVLs (P = 0.01). The axial length increase in children wearing SVLs and with two myopic parents was significantly more than the 0.89 +/- 0.07 mm increase in children wearing SVLs and with zero myopic parents (P = 0.015).
Parental refraction was related to myopia progression and changes in axial length. Among COMET children with two myopic parents, myopia progression and increases in axial length were slower in the group wearing PALs than in those wearing SVLs, by a statistically significant but clinically minor amount. Because this study was ancillary to COMET and the present analyses are based on a subset of participants, conclusions must be regarded as suggestive.
本研究调查了父母屈光不正与其后代近视进展之间的关系,以及父母屈光不正与佩戴渐进多焦点镜片(PALs)或单焦点镜片(SVLs)对近视矫正评估试验(COMET)中儿童近视进展影响之间的相互作用。
COMET研究中部分儿童(N = 232;占初始组的49%)的近视进展定义为在基线和5年随访时通过睫状肌麻痹自动验光获得的双眼平均球镜等效屈光度之差。父母的屈光度通过非睫状肌麻痹自动验光(81%)或近期眼科检查记录(19%)获得。
近视父母(平均球镜等效屈光度≤ -0.75 D)的数量与佩戴SVLs的儿童近视进展直接相关:无近视父母(零个)的儿童近视进展(平均值±标准误)为-1.81 ± 0.18 D,有一个近视父母的儿童为-2.04 ± 0.13 D;这些数值显著低于有两个近视父母的儿童的进展(-2.59 ± 0.19 D)。在PAL组中,进展与近视父母的数量无显著相关性,总体进展为-2.01 D。在有两个近视父母的儿童中,PAL组的进展为-2.00 D,显著低于佩戴SVLs的儿童(P = 0.03)。在无或有一个近视父母的儿童中,两组镜片的进展无显著差异。当对数据进行协变量调整时,治疗效果与近视父母数量之间的相互作用显著(P = 0.01)。在5年的研究期间,有两个近视父母且佩戴PALs的儿童眼轴长度增加了0.93 ± 0.07 mm,有两个近视父母且佩戴SVLs的儿童眼轴长度增加了1.18 ± 0.07 mm(P = 0.01)。有两个近视父母且佩戴SVLs的儿童眼轴长度增加显著高于无近视父母且佩戴SVLs的儿童的0.89 ± 0.07 mm增加量(P = 0.015)。
父母的屈光不正与近视进展及眼轴长度变化有关。在COMET研究中有两个近视父母的儿童中,佩戴PALs组的近视进展和眼轴长度增加比佩戴SVLs组慢,差异具有统计学意义但临床意义较小。由于本研究是COMET的辅助研究且目前的分析基于部分参与者,因此结论应视为具有提示性。