Reduced Daily Eye Patching Effectively Treats Childhood's Most
Common Eye Disorder.
NEI May 2003 Press Release
Patching the unaffected eye of children with moderate amblyopia
for two hours daily works as well as patching the eye for six hours.
This research finding should lead to better compliance with
treatment and improved quality of life for children with amblyopia,
or "lazy eye," the most common cause of visual impairment in
childhood. These results appear in the May issue of Archives of
Ophthalmology.
"These results will change the way doctors treat moderate
amblyopia and make an immediate difference in treatment compliance
and the quality of life for children with this eye disorder," said
Paul A. Sieving, M.D., Ph.D., director of the National Eye
Institute, one of the Federal government's National Institutes of
Health and the agency that sponsored the study. "This is very
important, because it is estimated that as many as three percent of
children in the U.S. have some degree of vision impairment due to
amblyopia."
After four months of treatment, children with moderate amblyopia
who wore an adhesive patch daily for two hours over their unaffected
eye showed the same improvement in vision as those who wore a patch
for six hours. Placing an opaque adhesive patch, or eye bandage,
over the unaffected eye for six hours daily is considered one of the
standard treatments for moderate amblyopia. Both groups of children
in the study performed one hour a day of "near" work, such as
coloring, tracing, reading, and crafts, while their eye was
patched.
Amblyopia, which usually begins in infancy or childhood, is a
condition of poor vision in an otherwise healthy eye because the
brain has learned to favor the other eye. Although the eye with
amblyopia often looks normal, there is interference with normal
visual processing that limits the development of a portion of the
brain responsible for vision. The most common causes of amblyopia
are crossed or wandering eyes or significant differences in
refractive error, such as farsightedness or nearsightedness, between
the two eyes.
"Prior to these results, many children with amblyopia had to wear
an eye patch during school hours," Dr. Sieving said. "For these
children, the accompanying social and psychological stigma was very
real. Many were stared at and teased by other children, which made
them feel different. Now, children can look forward to attending
school without the patch. This will make them feel better about
themselves."
Dr. Sieving said it is crucial for young children to comply with
the recommended treatment because visual impairment can persist into
adulthood if amblyopia is not successfully treated in early
childhood. Amblyopia is the most common cause of monocular (one eye)
visual impairment among children and young and middle-aged
adults.
"Because the daily burden to administer treatment for amblyopia
falls on the parent, the findings from this study will immediately
affect families that have young children with this eye disorder,"
said study chairman Michael Repka, M.D., professor of ophthalmology
and pediatrics at the Wilmer Eye Institute of Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine in Baltimore. "The findings make it
much easier for parents to monitor their children and encourage
children to successfully comply with treatment. Timely and
successful treatment for amblyopia in childhood can prevent lifelong
visual impairment."
Patching the unaffected eye has been the mainstay of amblyopia
treatment for decades. In March 2002, the same researchers reported
the effectiveness of a second treatment, which involved using
atropine eye drops that dilated the unaffected eye, temporarily
blurring vision. Both treatments force the child to use the eye with
amblyopia, stimulating vision improvement in that eye by helping the
part of the brain that manages vision to develop more completely.
However, with patching, opinions varied widely on the number of
daily hours it should be prescribed. No prior study had provided
conclusive evidence of the optimal number of patching hours.
In this study, 189 children less than seven years old with
moderate amblyopia were randomly assigned to receive either two
hours or six hours of daily patching. The average age of the
children was 5.2 years. Both groups showed significant improvement
in the vision of the eye with amblyopia. "After four months, we
found that 79 percent of children in the two-hour group and 76
percent of the patients in the six-hour group could read at least
two more lines on the standard eye chart," Dr. Repka said. "The
study also found that parents of children who wore the patch for six
hours were more concerned about social stigma than the parents of
children who wore the patch for two hours."
Dr. Repka said having the child perform one hour of "near," or
close-up, work per day while patched was an important part of the
prescribed treatment. He said it remains unclear if the same amount
of visual improvement would occur with patching alone. "We are
planning a clinical trial to address the importance of near work in
the treatment of amblyopia," he said.
Dr. Repka noted that these results do not necessarily apply to
all children with amblyopia. "Children with more severe amblyopia,
or who have amblyopia from causes other than crossed eyes or
refractive error, may need a different treatment regimen," he said.
"The Pediatric Eye Disease Investigator Group (PEDIG), which
conducted this study, is currently conducting a clinical trial on
children with severe amblyopia and expects the results will be
available in the Fall of 2003."
|