Audio-Digest Foundation: ophthalmology

Main Written Summaries Listing | Ophthalmology: 2008 Listings
Audio-Digest FoundationOphthalmology


Volume 46, Issue 18
September 21, 2008

The following is an abstracted summary, not a verbatim transcript, of the lectures/discussions on this audio program. If, after reviewing this written summary, you would like to hear the contents and/or earn CME/CE credit, simply visit the Audio-Digest Foundation website

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PEDIATRIC PEARLS




Educational Objectives

The goal of this program is to improve the management of vision problems in children. After hearing and assimilating this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. Describe benefits of screening and therapy for vision problems in preschool children and recognize risk factors for amblyopia.
2. Differentiate among technologies now available for screening vision in preschool children.
3. Evaluate the data from model vision screening programs.
4. Diagnose and prescribe spectacles and bifocals for children with disorders such as myopia, hyperopia, and accommodative esotropia.
5. Identify pediatric candidates for treatment with contact lenses and choose the optimal type of lens.

Faculty Disclosure

In adherence to ACCME Standards for Commercial Support, Audio-Digest requires all faculty and members of the planning committee to disclose relevant financial relationships within the past 12 months that might create any personal conflicts of interest. Any identified conflicts were resolved to ensure that this educational activity promotes quality in health care and not a proprietary business or commercial interest. For this program, Dr. Donahue disclosed a consulting relationship with Diopsys. Dr. Schoeck and the planning committee reported nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements


Dr. Donahue’s lectures were recorded at 2008 Ophthalmology Symposium: Pediatric Ophthalmology, held June 7, 2008, in Universal City, CA, sponsored by the Southern California Permanente Medical Group. Dr. Schoeck’s lecture was recorded at Update for the Comprehensive Ophthalmologist 2008: 26th Annual Meeting, held May 16, 2008, in Cleveland, OH, sponsored by University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. The Audio-Digest Foundation thanks the speakers and the sponsors for their cooperation in the production of this program.


VISION SCREENING IN CHILDREN —Sean P. Donahue, MD, PhD, Professor of Ophthalmology, Pediatrics, and Neurology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and Chief, Pediatric Ophthalmology Service, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Tennessee Lions Eye Center, Nashville, TN
Preschool vision screening: performed by pediatrician who refers patient; first study—screening caused 10-fold drop in risk for significant amblyopia; 50% of children with amblyopia in study had visual acuity (VA) of 20/30 or better; second study—screened group had 30% higher risk for amblyopia, compared to that of unscreened group; only 0.1% of screened children had severe loss of vision (VA of 20/60 or worse), compared to 1.5% to 2% of unscreened; third study— compared intensive annual or biannual screening to single screening at 3 yr of age; found intensive screening provided 60% reduction in significant amblyopia at 7.5 yr
Efficacy of therapy: first study—screened and referred children for therapy; 1 yr later, only 1 of 18 children who did not comply with therapy showed spontaneous improvement (amblyopia deteriorated or remained same in 17 of 18); 3 children at risk developed amblyopia because of noncompliance; second study—>1% of patients with amblyopia in one eye lost vision in second eye; 66% of these could not remain employed
New technologies: detect factors that cause amblyopia (ie, amblyogenic or amblyopic factors), but do not detect amblyopia itself; 2 types of technologies (ie, off-axis photoscreeners and autorefractors)
Amblyogenic risk factors: high levels of refractive errors (especially anisometropia), hyperopia, bilateral astigmatism (can also cause strabismus), and media opacity; according to consensus statement from American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus (AAPOS), threshold levels for risk factors include anisometropia >1.50 diopters (D); hyperopia >3.00 D; myopia >3.00 D; media opacity; astigmatism >1.50 D
Off-axis photoscreeners: in healthy emmetropic eye, flash image not visible through pupil; in nonemmetropic eye (eg, hyperopic) image appears as crescent; similar procedure detects myopia and strabismus
MTI PhotoScreener: first case—hyperopic child; image showed crescent, then flash rotated to vertical to detect refractive error in 2 principal meridians; second case—child with emmetropia in one eye, but cataract in second eye caused inward deviation and strabismus; Brückner test showed light reflex deviated temporally, indicating eye deviated nasally; cataract detected as media opacity blocking Brückner reflex
Preschool vision screening: model program—screened >200,000 children (97%) <5 yr of age; referred 4.5% to local optometrists or ophthalmologists, and 75% of referred patients satisfied criteria in AAPOS guidelines for vision problem; expanded program—includes 13 programs worldwide and has screened >750,000 children; referred 6%, with follow-up available for 50%; found positive predictive value (PPV) 68%
i-Screen: similar to MTI but with digital camera so possible to send images over Internet for reading and interpretation; results available next day
PlusoptiX: recently marketed instrument
Autorefractors: estimate refractive error using wave-front analysis; do not analyze for or detect strabismus
Nikon Retinomax and Welch Allyn SureSight: provide printout of refractive error and note whether it exceeds preprogrammed referral criteria; less expensive than photoscreening; Vision in Preschoolers (VIP) Study suggests autorefractor possibly more accurate than photoscreening; does not detect strabismus directly, but relies on higher refractive error
VIP Study: 3-phase study compared screening instruments to cycloplegic refraction (gold standard); phase 1 found autorefractors more sensitive than all other tests (including acuity test with Lea symbols); possibly also more effective than photoscreeners (controversial)
Diopsys: screening technology that uses visual evoked potentials and responses; amblyopic eyes produce lower amplitude and threshold for visual evoked response than fellow eyes; robust widely reimbursed electrophysiologic test
INDICATIONS FOR PRESCRIBING GLASSES AND BIFOCALS —Dr. Donahue
Symptomatic patients: myopia—distance acuity less necessary in children than in adults; myopia of -1.00 D in child 3 yr of age different treatment situation from patient at 14 yr of age with myopia of -2.00 D; hyperopia—treat accommodative esotropia to straighten eyes and develop binocular vision; treating accommodative strabismus decreases risk of needing surgery and developing amblyopia; prospective study—among children with >+3.50 D of hyperopia, treated group had 4-fold higher risk of developing strabismus or amblyopia than general population, but untreated children had 13-fold higher risk; crossing—in infants, prescribe spectacles if >+2.50 D, or surgery if <2.50 D; in older child with >+2.00 D, treatment depends on accommodative convergence-accommodation (AC/A) ratio and near-distance disparity; ie, if no difference observed between near and distance measurements, do not prescribe unless hyperopia higher
Prescribing bifocals for accommodative esotropia: appropriate when large difference exists between near vision and distance vision, but must be in monofixation range in distance; surgery required for >8 prism diopters (PD) of esotropia in distance (prism adaptation); for child with <8 PD in distance vision but out of monofixation range at near vision (ie, >10 PD), +3.00 D split-pupil bifocal needed to collapse near deviation; speaker does not prescribe progressive bifocals for young children because they do not get down into +3.00 D until bottom of segment; therefore, cannot collapse near- distance disparity; speaker occasionally uses progressive bifocals in children at 8 to 9 yr of age who may be at +2.00 D and weaning out of bifocals
Prophylactic bifocals: consider bifocals as first glasses for child with accommodative strabismus and high AC/A ratio
Asymptomatic hyperopia: reasons to treat—infantile and accommodative esotropia or family history of strabismus; threshold of +3.00 D or +2.50 D appropriate for prescribing spectacles; questionable cases—speaker does not favor prescribing for patients with poor accommodative effort or accommodative insufficiency (unless Down syndrome present and child hypoaccommodates); use strong accommodative target; obvious in children who play video games; study—no correlation between acuity, refraction, and academic performance among 2000 children with hyperopia (many had low level of hyperopia); reasons not to treat—unknown whether treatment of asymptomatic patients with hyperopia decreases natural emmetropization in adulthood; expense of spectacles; inconvenience to parents; benefit not apparent to parents
Evidence to guide prescribing: study—evaluated accommodative ability of 4000 healthy children; found normal child at 8 yr of age has 14 D of accommodative ability (range, 12-16 D); prescribing decision—consider that 7.00 D accommodation needed to accommodate to level of one-third meter with +4.00 D hyperopia, because ability to focus 4.00 D needed to achieve emmetropia and additional 3.00 D needed to achieve near working distance of 33 cm; to determine maximum tolerable amount of uncorrected hyperopia in child who has working distance of 33 cm when reading and needs one-half of accommodation in reserve, assume 7.00 D can be used and 3.00 D needed to read at 33 cm; child can tolerate up to +4.00 D hyperopia without treatment; first study—conducted to determine definition of hyperopia; evaluated several hundred children and found mean hyperopia of 1.40 D, with 95% at <3.25 D; second study—evaluated refractive errors in children 5 to 15 yr of age in 3 countries; found most children in Nepal had 2.00 D, most in Chile had 2.50 D, and most in China had 3.00 to 3.50 D; among 21 children with >+4.00 D hyperopia, all had uncorrected VA of 20/40 or better; follow-up study found little degradation of VA until hyperopia reached +3.50 to +4.00 D
Surveys of current practice: survey of 212 optometrists and 102 ophthalmologists found 33% and 5%, respectively, would prescribe for asymptomatic child at 6 yr of age with +3.00 to +4.00 D hyperopia; for child at 2 yr of age, most would not prescribe until hyperopia reached +5.00 D; second survey— majority of AAPOS members who responded prescribed at level of hyperopia of +4.00 to +5.00 D in asymptomatic children 6 yr of age
Preferred practice patterns from American Academy of Ophthalmology: guidelines mandate cycloplegia with cyclopentolate during examination of children; recommend prescribing at +4.50 D for children at 3 yr of age; for children at 4 yr of age, prescribe to improve VA or alleviate asthenopia; AAPOS Vision Screening Committee recommends prescribing for hyperopia >+3.50 D, as did VIP study; speaker recommends average threshold of +3.50 D (raises to +4.00 to +5.00 D for younger children, and lowers to +2.00 to +3.00 D for those with family history of strabismus or Down syndrome); measure accommodative strabismus and treat with full cycloplegic refraction; for patients with high hyperopia but no strabismus, undercorrect by 1.50 D
Adherence to guidelines: first study—possibly 35% of children wearing glasses did not need them; recent screening program—screened 100,000 children and referred 3600; 2700 referred children met AAPOS criteria for true vision problem, 890 did not (false positives); in cases where there was no other pathology and which did not meet AAPOS criteria, optometrists recommended glasses 36% of time, ophthalmologists recommended glasses 11% of time, and pediatric ophthalmologists recommended glasses 1.8% of time; 15 children <6 yr of age received glasses for <1.00 D hyperopia; rate not influenced by clinician’s level of experience; 18% rate of prescription error amounts to $135 million spent annually (direct cost) on unneeded glasses in United States
CONTACTS AND KIDS: A WINNING COMBINATION —Sara E. Schoeck, OD, Optometrist and Senior Instructor, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital, Cleveland, OH
Contact Lenses in Pediatrics Study: compared fitting of elective contact lenses (CL) and follow-up for children at 8 to 12 and 13 to 17 yr of age; found age alone insufficient criterion upon which to base CL recommendation; both groups adjusted similarly and neither experienced problems
Factors in prescribing elective CL
Readiness and motivation: assess hygiene to determine child’s ability to comply with CL care protocols; athletic children generally motivated and able to insert and remove CL; anecdotal evidence suggests girls may be more motivated and able to wear CL; evaluate whether CL serve visual needs of patient
Appropriate lens: speaker favors silicone hydrogel lens because of high permeability to oxygen; she often recommends UV-protective CL, and always recommends sunglasses; speaker never prescribes extended-wear CL because of risk for bacterial keratitis and corneal ulcers; rigid gas-permeable (RGP) CL easy to care for, durable, and may potentially slow progression of myopia
Replacement schedule and wear time: monthly or daily disposable CL better for compliance; daily disposables eliminate care system, avoid infections by Fusarium and Acanthamoeba associated with multipurpose solutions (MPS), and appropriate for children with allergies; spherical, toric, and multifocal lenses available, but only 7% of patients in United States wear daily disposable CL, compared to up to 45% elsewhere
Appropriate involvement by parents: patients should care for CL independently
Medically necessary CL
Common indications in children: monocular or bilateral aphakia, irregular astigmatism, high myopia, high astigmatism, uncorrected hyperopia associated with esotropia, and anisometropia
Soft CL for aphakia and high hyperopia: silicone elastomer (eg, Bausch & Lomb SilSoft) for infants; range of powers; 2 diameters; speaker encourages parents to remove CL every 3 to 4 nights; advantages—high oxygen permeability, performance, and improved cosmesis over spectacles; limitations—drying, accumulation of deposits (eg, lipids) on surface, and need for more frequent follow-up because of potential for infection or inflammation; fitting—use spectacle prescription from surgeon (after cataract surgery), correct for vertex distance, and apply necessary overcorrection for near vision
Custom silicone hydrogel: features—high oxygen permeability, surface that resists deposits, and better movement and tear exchange; only available as daily wear lens; limited powers
Anisometropia and convergence excess: treat with spherical silicone hydrogel or silicone hydrogel multifocals (eg, PureVision Multifocal), respectively
RGP CL: Contact Lenses and Myopia (CLAMP) Study—found 80% of young patients adapted to RGPs successfully; alignment- fit RGPs flattened corneal curvature by 0.50 D in 2 mo; did not slow axial growth of eyes, so no permanent effect on slowing myopia; in infantseg, for aphakia; RGPs approved for extended wear; require more skill to fit; possible to do in hospital under anesthesia in operating room using spectacle prescription from surgeon, then correct for vertex distance and add overcorrection for near vision

Suggested Reading

Braveman R: Diagnosis and treatment of refractive errors in the pediatric population. Curr Opin Oththalmol 18:379, 2007; Brook I: Ocular infections due to anaerobic bacteria in children. J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus 45:78, 2008; Campos EC: Why do the eyes cross? A review and discussion of the nature and origin of essential infantile esoptroia, microstrabismus, accommodative esotropia, and acute comitant esotropia. J AAPOS Jun 10[Epub ahead of print], 2008; Carlton J et al: The clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of screening programmes for amblyopia and strabismus in children up to the age of 4 to 5 years: a systematic review and economic evaluation. Health Technol Assess 12:1, 2008; Cotter SA: Management of childhood hyperopia: a pediatric optometrist’s perspective. Optom Vis Sci 84:103, 2007; Cotter SA et al: Treatment of strabismic amblyopia with refractive correction. Am J Ophthalmol 143:1060, 2007; Donahue SP: Clinical practice. Pediatric strabismus. N Engl J Med 356:1040, 2007; Duncan PM et al: Bright Futures: the screening table recommendations. Pediatr Ann 37:152, 2008; Kemper AR: Corrective lens wear among adolescents: findings from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus 44:256, 2007; Kirk VG et al: Preverbal photoscreening for amblyogenic factors and outcomes in amblyopia treatment: early objective screening and visual acuities. Arch Ophthalmol 126:489, 2008; Mahoney BG: Common forms of childhood strabismus in an incidence cohort. Am J Ophthalmol 144:465, 2007; Rogers DL et al: Comparison of the MTI Photoscreener and the Welch-Allyn SureSight autorefractor in a tertiary care center. J AAPOS 12:77, 2008; Saltarelli DP: Hyper oxygen-permeable rigid contact lenses as an alternative for the treatment of pediatric aphakia. Eye Contac Lens 34:84, 2008; Shah S et al: Prevalence of amblyogenic risk factors in siblings of patients with accommodative esotropia. J AAPOS Jun 4 [Epub ahead of print], 2008; Tingley DH: Vision screening essentials: screening today for eye disorders in the pediatric patient. Pediatr Rev 28:54, 2007; Vision in Preschoolers Study Group: Does assessing eye alignment along with refractive error or visual acuity increase sensitivity for detection of strabismus in preschool vision screening? Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 48:3115, 2007; Webber AL: Amblyopia treatment: an evidence-based approach to maximizing treatment outcome. Clin Exp Optom 90:250, 2007; Williams C et al: Prevalence and risk factors for common vision problems in children: data from the ALSPAC study. Br J Ophthalmol 92:959, 2008.

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