4.2 Article

Comparison of myopia progression between children wearing three types of orthokeratology lenses and children wearing single-vision spectacles

期刊

JAPANESE JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
卷 65, 期 5, 页码 632-643

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SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10384-021-00854-4

关键词

Orthokeratology; Lens design; Myopia progression; Refractive error; School-aged children

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The study evaluated factors related to myopia progression in children wearing orthokeratology (OK) lenses or single-vision spectacles (SVS) for 2 years. Results indicated that regardless of OK lens design, myopia progression in school-aged children was suppressed, with a myopia control effect of 0.85 D over the 2-year period. Factors such as correction method, baseline age, and baseline refractive error were found to be related to the progression of myopia.
Purpose To evaluate factors related to myopia progression in children wearing either orthokeratology (OK) lenses or single-vision spectacles (SVS) for 2 years. Study design Pooled-analysis retrospective intervention study. Methods This study involved 105 school-aged children wearing SVS who participated in the multi-center Myovision Study and 89 school-aged children wearing one of 3 OK lens types [Menicon Z Night (M, n = 27), alpha ORTHO-K (A, n = 32), and Emerald((TM)) (E, n = 30)]. In the OK-lens patients, last examination was performed at >= 3-weeks post lens-wear discontinuation. Of the subjects, 102 SVS-Group and 79 OK-Group (M: n = 24, A: n = 28, and E: n = 27) children completed all examinations. A relationship between refractive error (RE) change and 7 factors (correction methods, baseline age, baseline RE, baseline axial length, gender, right or left eye, and follow-up period) was derived by multiple regression modeling. Via those same methods, we investigated the relationship between RE change and 7 factors including 3 OK-lens corrections. Results Related influence factors were correction method (0.85 D myopia reduction in the OK Group, P < 0.001), baseline age (0.16 D myopia reduction in older-age patients, P < 0.001), and baseline RE (0.12 D myopia reduction per 1 D myopia, P = 0.01). No relationship was found between RE change and OK-lens type. No serious adverse events occurred. Conclusion Regardless of OK lens design, myopia progression in school-aged children was suppressed. The effect was examined not only via axial-length elongation but also RE change, and the myopia control effect by OK lenses was found to be 0.85 D over the 2-year period.

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