Ophthalmology and Therapy (Jun 2024)

Association Between Myopia and Pupil Diameter in Preschoolers: Evidence from a Machine Learning Approach Based on a Real-World Large-Scale Dataset

  • Shengsong Xu,
  • Linling Li,
  • Wenjing Han,
  • Yingting Zhu,
  • Yin Hu,
  • Zhidong Li,
  • Zhenbang Ruan,
  • Zhuandi Zhou,
  • Yehong Zhuo,
  • Min Fu,
  • Xiao Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40123-024-00972-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7
pp. 2009 – 2022

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Previous studies have explored the connections between various ocular biological parameters with myopia. Our previous study also found that pupil data can predict the myopic progression during the interventions for myopia. However, studies exploring the association between pupil diameter and myopia in preschoolers with myopia were lacking. Hence this study was aimed to investigate the association between pupil diameter and myopia in preschoolers with myopia based on a real-world, large-scale dataset. Methods Data containing 650,671 preschoolers were collected from a total of 1943 kindergartens in Shenzhen, China. Refraction and pupil parameters were collected. After data filtering, the occurrence of myopia and its association with age, gender, pupil diameter, and other variables, were analyzed. Random forest (RF) and eXtreme gradient boosting (XGBoost) were selected from seven machine learning algorithms to build the model. The mean decrease accuracy (MDA), mean decrease Gini (MDG), and gain feature importance (GFI) techniques were employed to quantify the importance of pupil diameter and other features. Results After the assessments, 51,325 valid records with complete pupil data were included, and 3468 (6.76%) were identified as myopia based on the calculated cycloplegic refraction. Preschoolers with myopia presented reduced pupil diameter and greater variation (5.00 ± 0.99 mm) compared to non-myopic preschoolers (6.22 ± 0.67 mm). A nonlinear relationship was found according to the scatterplots between pupil diameter and refraction (R 2 = 0.14). Especially preschoolers with myopia had reduced pupil diameter compared to emmetropic preschoolers, but hyperope did not experience additional pupil enlargement. After adjusting for other covariates, this relationship is still consistent (P < 0.001). XGBoost and RF algorithms presented the highest performance and validated the importance of pupil diameter in myopia. Conclusions Based on a real-world large-scale dataset, the current study illuminated that preschoolers with myopia had a reduced pupil diameter compared to emmetropic preschoolers with a nonlinear pattern. Machine learning algorithms visualized and validated the pivotal role of pupil diameter in myopia. Trial Registration chictr.org Identifier: ChiCTR2200057391.

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