Predicting the onset of myopia in children by age, sex, and ethnicity: Results from the CLEERE Study

Author:

Mutti Donald O.,Sinnott Loraine T.1,Cotter Susan A.2,Jones-Jordan Lisa A.1,Kleinstein Robert N.3,Manny Ruth E.4,Twelker J. Daniel5,Zadnik Karla1

Affiliation:

1. The Ohio State University College of Optometry, Columbus, Ohio

2. Southern California College of Optometry at Marshall B. Ketchum University, Fullerton, California

3. School of Optometry, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama

4. University of Houston College of Optometry, Houston, Texas

5. Department of Ophthalmology and Vision Science, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona; for the CLEERE Study

Abstract

SIGNIFICANCE Clinicians and researchers would benefit from being able to predict the onset of myopia for an individual child. This report provides a model for calculating the probability of myopia onset, year-by-year and cumulatively, based on results from the largest, most ethnically diverse study of myopia onset in the United States. PURPOSE This study aimed to model the probability of the onset of myopia in previously nonmyopic school-aged children. METHODS Children aged 6 years to less than 14 years of age at baseline participating in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study who were nonmyopic and less hyperopic than +3.00 D (spherical equivalent) were followed up for 1 to 7 years through eighth grade. Annual measurements included cycloplegic autorefraction, keratometry, ultrasound axial dimensions, and parental report of children's near work and time spent in outdoor and/or sports activities. The onset of myopia was defined as the first visit with at least −0.75 D of myopia in each principal meridian. The predictive model was built using discrete time survival analysis and evaluated with C statistics. RESULTS The model of the probability of the onset of myopia included cycloplegic spherical equivalent refractive error, the horizontal/vertical component of astigmatism (J 0), age, sex, and race/ethnicity. Onset of myopia was more likely with lower amounts of hyperopia and less positive/more negative values of J 0. Younger Asian American females had the highest eventual probability of onset, whereas older White males had the lowest. Model performance increased with older baseline age, with C statistics ranging from 0.83 at 6 years of age to 0.92 at 13 years. CONCLUSIONS The probability of the onset of myopia can be estimated for children in the major racial/ethnic groups within the United States on a year-by-year and cumulative basis up to age 14 years based on a simple set of refractive error and demographic variables.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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