Teoh Lucinda J, Solebo Ameenat Lola, Rahi Jugnoo S
Population, Policy and Practice, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, UK.
Ulverscroft Vision Research Group, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, UK.
Br J Ophthalmol. 2023 May;107(5):717-724. doi: 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2021-320119. Epub 2021 Dec 23.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Understanding temporal trends in childhood visual disability is necessary for planning and evaluating clinical services and health policies. We investigate the changing epidemiology of severe visual impairment (SVI) and blindness (BL) in children in the UK in the 21st century.
Comparative analysis of two national population-based epidemiological studies of incident childhood SVI/BL (ICD-10 definition; visual acuity worse than 1.0 LogMAR in the better eye). We carry out comparative analysis of studies conducted in 2000 and 2015 using identical methods.
Overall annual and cumulative incidence rates remained broadly stable in 2015 at 0.38 per 10 000 (95% CI 0.34 to 0.41) for 0-15 years old and 5.65 per 10 000 (5.16 to 6.18) by 16 years, respectively, and with annual incidence in infancy (3.52 per 10 000, 3.13 to 3.97) remaining considerably higher than any other age. Mortality among children diagnosed in infancy declined (from 61.4 to 25.6 per 1000), despite an increase (from 77% to 84%, p=0.037) in the overall proportion with significant non-ophthalmic impairments/disorders. The relative contribution of all the main groups of disorders increased over time, most notably cerebral visual impairment (from 50% to 61%). Aetiological factors operating prenatally continued to predominate, with an increased relative contribution of hereditary conditions in all children (from 35% to 57%, p<0.001). The substantially elevated rates for any ethnic minority group and those born preterm were unchanged, with amplification of increased rates associated with low birth weight.
The changing landscape of healthcare and increased survival of affected children, is reflected in increasing clinical complexity and heterogeneity of all-cause SVI/BL alongside declining mortality.
背景/目的:了解儿童视力残疾的时间趋势对于规划和评估临床服务及卫生政策至关重要。我们调查了21世纪英国儿童严重视力损害(SVI)和失明(BL)的流行病学变化情况。
对两项基于全国人口的儿童期新发SVI/BL(国际疾病分类第10版定义;较好眼视力低于1.0 LogMAR)流行病学研究进行比较分析。我们采用相同方法对2000年和2015年开展的研究进行比较分析。
2015年,0至15岁儿童的总体年发病率和累积发病率大致保持稳定,分别为每10000人中有0.38例(95%可信区间为0.34至0.41),16岁时为每10000人中有5.65例(5.16至6.18),婴儿期的年发病率(每10000人中有3.52例,3.13至3.97)仍远高于其他任何年龄段。尽管存在明显非眼科损伤/疾病的总体比例有所增加(从77%增至84%,p = 0.037),但婴儿期确诊儿童的死亡率有所下降(从每1000例中的61.4例降至25.6例)。随着时间推移,所有主要疾病组的相对贡献均有所增加,最显著的是脑性视力损害(从50%增至61%)。产前起作用的病因因素仍然占主导地位,所有儿童中遗传性疾病的相对贡献有所增加(从35%增至57%,p < 0.001)。任何少数族裔群体以及早产出生儿童的发病率大幅升高的情况未变,与低出生体重相关的发病率升高情况有所加剧。
医疗保健格局的变化以及患病儿童存活率的提高,反映在全因性SVI/BL的临床复杂性和异质性增加以及死亡率下降方面。