Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2024)

Development of a risk score for myopia: A cohort study conducted among school-aged children in China

  • Ziwei Shi,
  • Lihua Yang,
  • Ting Xu,
  • Jing Jia,
  • Song Yang,
  • Bo Yang,
  • Wei Yang,
  • Changchun Yang,
  • Yan Peng,
  • Hong Gu,
  • Caiping Liu,
  • Sheng Wei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/IJO.IJO_2077_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72, no. 14
pp. 265 – 272

Abstract

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Purpose: To evaluate the myopia risk in school-aged children one year after lifting a pandemic-related lockdown and develop a tool to identify high-risk groups. Methods: In total, 38,079 children without myopia from 38 schools were included. The outcomes were myopia incidence and progression in 1 year after the COVID-19 lockdown was lifted, both obtained by the spherical equivalent refraction (SER). We separated the population into an exploratory (75%) and a validation sample (25%) to construct the risk score model. Results: In total, 9811 (29.57%) students became myopic, and the overall myopia progression was 0.22 ± 0.62 D. Even less myopia progression was noted in the pre-myopia group at baseline (All: P = 0.045, Boy: P = 0.005). The risk score model included seven predictors: gender, grade, SER at baseline, residence, parental myopia, eye discomfort symptoms, and online courses. The model had a score range of 0–46 and an optimal cutoff of 34. The area under the receiver operating curve of the model was 0.726 (0.719–0.732) for the exploratory sample and 0.731 (0.720–0.742) for the validation sample. Conclusions: The risk score can serve as a practical tool for classifying the risk of myopia in school-aged children.

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