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Treatment of Myopia – Current Status and Recent Advances

Andrzej Grzybowski
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Published Online: Dec 22nd 2017 European Ophthalmic Review, 2017;11(2):85–6 DOI: https://doi.org/10.17925/EOR.2017.11.02.85
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Abstract

Overview

The incidence of myopia is increasing and represents a major global economic and social
burden. In addition to its disadvantages in terms of vision, myopia increases the risk of
myopic macular degeneration, retinal detachment, glaucoma, and cataract and is a leading
cause of visual impairment and blindness worldwide. Pharmacological, environmental, and optical
interventions have been used to try to slow the progress of myopia. While spectacles and contact
lenses have a long history in controlling accommodative responses, they do not slow progression.
In an expert interview conducted at EURETINA 2017, Andrzej Grzybowski of PInstitute for Research
in Ophthalmology, Poznan, Poland discusses the current status of myopia and its treatment, as
well as discussing new technologies aimed at delaying progression of the condition.

Keywords

Myopia, atropine, pirenzepine, fluid misdirection
syndrome, EURETINA

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Article

The incidence of myopia is increasing and represents a major global economic and social burden.1 In addition to its disadvantages in terms of vision, myopia increases the risk of myopic macular degeneration, retinal detachment, glaucoma and cataract and is a leading cause of visual impairment and blindness worldwide.2 Pharmacological, environmental and optical interventions have been used to try to slow the progress of myopia. While spectacles and contact lenses have a long history in controlling accommodative responses, they do not slow progression. In an expert interview conducted at EURETINA 2017, Andrzej Grzybowski of the Institute for Research in Ophthalmology, Poznan, Poland discusses the current status of myopia and its treatment, as well as discussing new technologies aimed at delaying progression of the condition.

Q: Why has the prevalence of myopia increased so much in recent years?

The modern rise in myopia mirrors a trend for children in many countries spending more time engaged in reading, studying or glued to computers and smartphone screens. The evidence suggests that these environmental factors changes play a significant role, particularly in East and Southeast Asia. In some places, children cannot get enough outdoor light: there are too few hours of daylight, the sun is too fierce or the cold too intense.3,4

Q: What have been the most important advances in non-surgical treatment for myopia in the last year?

High-dose atropine (1% and 0.5%), moderate-dose atropine (0.1%) and low-dose atropine (0.01%) showed clear effects in myopia control (all with statistically significant effect).57 With that the preliminary results of ongoing studies regarding the efficacy of pirenzepine, increased light exposure (e.g., using the Kurango study lamp) and 7-methylxantine are promising.8

Q: What are the benefits and limitations of the use of atropine eye drops for the treatment of myopia?

High-dose atropine was proved to be superior to other interventions. The side-effects might include temporary stinging, blurred vision, pupil dilation and eye irritation, limiting a long-term application.9 This leaves low-dose atropine, pirenzepine and soft contact lenses with myopia control features (for example, peripheral defocus modifying designs) as viable options for the active management of myopia progression.1012

Q: What is your opinion on the use of toric orthokeratology for the treatment of myopia?

The use of orthokeratology is limited by its complexity and cost. However, this treatment showed moderate effects for myopia control in several studies.13,14

Q: Which presentations would you highlight from this year’s EURETINA meeting?

My highlight was the presentation regarding the fluid misdirection syndrome. In a recent review article we proposed a unified definition of this syndrome, known for almost 150 years as malignant glaucoma.15 It might occur intraoperatively, however very few papers have been published on the topic. Anecdotally, most anterior segment surgeons report to have experienced such cases.

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References

  1. Holden B, Sankaridurg P, Smith E, et al., Myopia, an underrated global challenge to vision: where the current data takes us on myopia control, Eye (Lond), 2014;28:142–6.
  2. Holden BA, Fricke TR, Wilson DA, et al., Global prevalence of myopia and high myopia and temporal trends from 2000 through 2050, Ophthalmology, 2016;123:1036–42.
  3. French AN, Morgan IG, Mitchell P, et al., Risk factors for incident myopia in australian schoolchildren: the sydney adolescent vascular and eye study, Ophthalmology, 2013;120:2100–8.
  4. Grzybowski A, Armesto A, Szwajkowska M, et al., The Role of Atropine Eye Drops in Myopia Control, Curr Pharm Des, 2015;21:4718–30.
  5. Chia A, Chua WH, Cheung YB, et al., Atropine for the treatment of childhood myopia: safety and efficacy of 0,5%, 0,1% and 0,01% Doses (Atropine for the Treatment of Myopia 2), Ophthalmology, 2012;119:47–354.
  6. Chia A, Chua WH, Wen L, et al., Atropine for the treatment of childhood myopia: changes after stopping atropine 0.01%, 0.1% and 0.5%, Am J Ophthalmol, 2014;157:451–7.
  7. Chia A, Li W, Tan D, et al., Full- field ectroretinogram findings in children in the atropine treatment for myopia (ATOM 2) study, Doc Ophthalmol, 2013;126:177–86.
  8. Trier K, Munk Ribel-Madsen S, Cui D, Brøgger Christensen S, Systemic 7-methylxanthine in retarding axial eye growth and myopia progression: a 36-month pilot study, J Ocul Biol Dis Infor, 2008;1:85–93.
  9. Huang J, Wen D, Wang Q, et al., Efficacy comparison of 16 interventions for myopia control in children: A network meta-analysis, Ophthalmology, 2016;123:697–708.
  10. Smith EL 3rd, Prentice Award Lecture 2010: A case for peripheral optical treatment strategies for myopia, Optom Vis Sci, 2011; 88:1029–44.
  11. Smith EL 3rd, Campbell MC, Irving E, Does peripheral retinal input explain the promising myopia control effects of corneal reshaping therapy (CRT or ortho-K) & multifocal soft contact lenses?, Ophthalmic Physiol Opt, 2013;33:379–84.
  12. Charman WN, Radhakrishnan H, Peripheral refraction and the development of refractive error: a review, Ophthalmic Physiol Opt, 2010;30:321–38.
  13. Cho P, Cheung SW, Retardation of myopia in Orthokeratology (ROMIO) study: a 2-year randomized clinical trial, Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2012;53:7077–85.
  14. Lee YC, Wang JH, Chiu CJ, Effect of orthokeratology on myopia progression: twelve-year results of a retrospective cohort study, BMC Ophthalmol, 2017;17:243.
  15. Grzybowski A, Kanclerz P, Acute and chronic fluid misdirection syndrome: pathophysiology and treatment, Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol, 2017; Epub ahead of print (doi: 10.1007/s00417-017-3837-00).
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Article Information

Disclosure

Andrzej Grzybowski has nothing to disclose
in relation to this article. This is an expert interview and as
such has not undergone the journal’s standard peer
review process.
Authorship: All named authors meet the International
Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for
authorship of this manuscript, take responsibility for the
integrity of the work as a whole, and have given final
approval to the version to be published.

Correspondence

Andrzej Grzybowski,
Department of Ophthalmology, Poznan’ City Hospital,
3 Szwajcarska St, 361–285 Poznan’, Poland.
E: ae.grzybowski@gmail.com

Support

No funding was received in the publication of
this article.

Access

This article is published under the
Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License,
which permits any non-commercial use, distribution,
adaptation and reproduction provided the original
author(s) and source are given appropriate credit.

Received

2017-11-24T00:00:00

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