School of Physical Education, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, China.
Ophthalmic Res. 2024;67(1):393-404. doi: 10.1159/000539229. Epub 2024 May 6.
Spending more time outdoors was treated as a safe and cost-effective method to prevent and control myopia. While prior research has established an inverse association between outdoor time and the risk of myopia onset, the effect of increasing outdoor time in delaying the progression of myopia remains a subject of debate. The present meta-analysis aimed to assess the relationship between outdoor time and the myopia onset, and further examine whether there is a dose-response relationship between outdoor time and the risk of myopia onset. Meanwhile, perform whether the outdoor time is related to delaying the progression of myopia.
Studies were retrieved from PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, Medline, and the Cochrane Database, spanning from their inception to February 2023. Three cohort studies and 5 prospective intervention studies were included, with a total of 12,922 participants aged 6-16 years.
Comparing the highest with the lowest exposure levels of time spent outdoors, the highest outdoor time was strongly associated with a reduced risk of myopia onset (odds ratio [OR]: 0.53; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.34, 0.82). A nonlinear dose-response relationship was found between outdoor time and myopia onset risk. Compared to 3.5 h of outdoor time per week, an increase to 7, 16.3, and 27 h per week corresponded with a respective reduction in the risk of myopia onset by 20%, 53%, and 69%. Among children and adolescents who were not myopic, spending more time outdoors significantly slowed down the speed of change in spherical equivalent refractive (weighted mean difference [WMD] = 0.10D, 95% CI: 0.07, 0.14) and axial length (WMD = -0.05 mm, 95% CI: -0.06, -0.03). Among children and adolescents who were already myopic, spending more time outdoors did not slow myopia progression.
Overall, spending more time outdoors can prevent the onset of myopia, but it does not seem to slow its progression. Further studies are needed to better understand these trends.
多在户外活动被视为一种安全且具成本效益的方法,可预防和控制近视。虽然先前的研究已经证实了户外活动时间与近视发病风险之间存在反比关系,但增加户外活动时间对延缓近视进展的效果仍存在争议。本荟萃分析旨在评估户外活动时间与近视发病之间的关系,并进一步探讨户外活动时间与近视发病风险之间是否存在剂量-反应关系。同时,评估户外活动时间是否与延缓近视进展有关。
从 PubMed、Web of Science、Embase、Medline 和 Cochrane 数据库中检索研究,时间跨度从成立到 2023 年 2 月。共纳入 3 项队列研究和 5 项前瞻性干预研究,共有 12922 名 6-16 岁的参与者。
与户外活动时间最低暴露水平相比,最高户外活动时间与近视发病风险降低显著相关(优势比 [OR]:0.53;95%置信区间 [CI]:0.34,0.82)。发现户外活动时间与近视发病风险之间存在非线性剂量-反应关系。与每周户外活动时间 3.5 小时相比,每周增加 7、16.3 和 27 小时,分别对应近视发病风险降低 20%、53%和 69%。在尚未近视的儿童和青少年中,多在户外活动可显著减缓等效球镜屈光度(加权均数差 [WMD] = 0.10D,95%CI:0.07,0.14)和眼轴长度(WMD = -0.05mm,95%CI:-0.06,-0.03)的变化速度。在已经近视的儿童和青少年中,多在户外活动并不能减缓近视进展。
总的来说,多在户外活动可以预防近视的发生,但似乎不能减缓其进展。需要进一步的研究来更好地了解这些趋势。