4.6 Article

Prevalence and causes of blindness and vision impairment: magnitude, temporal trends and projections in South and Central Asia

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volume 103, Issue 7, Pages 871-877

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2018-312292

Keywords

global burden of disease study; vision loss expert group; vision loss; blindness; vision impairment; refractive error; cataract; glaucoma; macular degeneration; epidemiology

Categories

Funding

  1. Brien Holden Vision Institute

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Background To assess prevalence and causes of vision loss in Central and South Asia. Methods A systematic review of medical literature assessed the prevalence of blindness (presenting visual acuity<3/60 in the better eye), moderate and severe vision impairment (MSVI; presenting visual acuity <6/18 but >= 3/60) and mild vision impairment (MVI; presenting visual acuity <6/12 and >= 6/18) in Central and South Asia for 1990, 2010, 2015 and 2020. Results In Central and South Asia combined, age-standardised prevalences of blindness, MSVI and MVI in 2015 were for men and women aged 50+years, 3.72% (80% uncertainty interval (UI): 1.39-6.75) and 4.00% (80% UI: 1.41-7.39), 16.33% (80% UI: 8.55-25.47) and 17.65% (80% UI: 9.00-27.62), 11.70% (80% UI: 4.70-20.32) and 12.25% (80% UI:4.86-21.30), respectively, with a significant decrease in the study period for both gender. In South Asia in 2015, 11.76 million individuals (32.65% of the global blindness figure) were blind and 61.19 million individuals (28.3% of the global total) had MSVI. From 1990 to 2015, cataract (accounting for 36.58% of all cases with blindness in 2015) was the most common cause of blindness, followed by undercorrected refractive error (36.43%), glaucoma (5.81%), age-related macular degeneration (2.44%), corneal diseases (2.43%), diabetic retinopathy (0.16%) and trachoma (0.04%). For MSVI in South Asia 2015, most common causes were undercorrected refractive error (accounting for 66.39% of all cases with MSVI), followed by cataract (23.62%), age-related macular degeneration (1.31%) and glaucoma (1.09%). Conclusions One-third of the global blind resided in South Asia in 2015, although the age-standardised prevalence of blindness and MSVI decreased significantly between 1990 and 2015.

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