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New glasses stop myopia progression successfully, finds trial
Researchers at University of Washington School of Medicine have developed glasses to stop myopia or nearsightedness in children. The new glasses have been shown to work in a multi-site trial of 256 children and will go on sale later this year outside the United States.
After a year, the trial showed a reduction in myopia progression of 59 percent and 74 percent.The paper has been published in Review of Myopia Management.
The glasses are the vision of scientists Jay and Maureen Neitz and ophthalmology colleagues at the University of Washington School of Medicine.
The three-year trial known as CYPRESS (Control of Myopia Using Peripheral Diffusion Lenses: Efficacy and Safety Study) is a prospective, multi-center, subject- and observer-masked, randomized, controlled pivotal clinical study. The participants are 256 children aged 6-to-10 years old across 14 trial sites in the United States and Canada.
"For the very first time there are glasses that, when you wear them, actually slow or even stop the progression of myopia," said Jay Neitz, who is also co-founder of SightGlass Vision Inc. of Palo Alto, Calif., which is focused on ending myopia.
Trial participants are using one of three types of lenses instead of their normal glasses: control lenses or one of two test lens designs. After their assessments at baseline, participants are followed for progression of myopia over 36 months.
The FDA requires three years of data before the glasses can be considered a medical device that prevents myopia. But outside the United States, the glasses are eligible for a CE certification that indicates conformity with health, safety, and environmental protection standards for products sold within the European Economic Area. The CE marking is also found on products sold outside the EEA that have been manufactured to EEA standards. The glasses are scheduled to be available in Europe and Canada later this year or early 2021.
Nearsightedness or myopia is a condition that occurs when the light coming into an eye does not focus on the retina, but in front of it, making things look blurry.
Approximately half of all young adults in the U.S. and Europe are nearsighted – double the number from when their grandparents were the same age. In China, about 80-90% of teens and young adults are myopic, up from 10-20% 65 years ago.
This increase is thought to relate to lifestyle changes, including less time outdoors and more eye-straining or near work-related activities such as reading and screen time. Early intervention is key to preventing high myopia from developing.
For the Neitzes, the trial results follow a lifetime of trying to find the cause of myopia and how to end it.
Their big breakthrough in understanding myopia occurred in 2008 when they studied a particular group of people who had a genetic form of myopia that's very severe. They discovered a gene mutation that was causing the myopia.
"It turns out it was a mutation in the cone photoreceptors," said Jay Neitz. "We then realized that it's really just the way that the images are being encoded on the retina."
What's supposed to happen as your eye grows, is that things should begin to go out of focus in the periphery of your vision. That's a signal for the eyes to stop growing.
But as long as things are still clear in the periphery, the eyes think this person must still be farsighted, because in the natural world things in the periphery are far away.
Neitz said his team was able to design a lens to make central vision clear and in focus, and give the peripheal vision much lower contrast.
"It recreates what is supposed to be going on with our eyes before we started putting all of these things in front of our face like computer screens and tablets," he said.
The study was funded by SightVision but designed in consultation with the Food and Drug Administration. SightGlass Vision employees are not involved in the study. Study results were decoded by an unbiased third party and securely communicated to SightGlass Vision but the identities of study participants are not known by the company.
Hina Zahid Joined Medical Dialogue in 2017 with a passion to work as a Reporter. She coordinates with various national and international journals and association and covers all the stories related to Medical guidelines, Medical Journals, rare medical surgeries as well as all the updates in the medical field. Email:Â editorial@medicaldialogues.in. Contact no. 011-43720751
Dr Kamal Kant Kohli-MBBS, DTCD- a chest specialist with more than 30 years of practice and a flair for writing clinical articles, Dr Kamal Kant Kohli joined Medical Dialogues as a Chief Editor of Medical News. Besides writing articles, as an editor, he proofreads and verifies all the medical content published on Medical Dialogues including those coming from journals, studies,medical conferences,guidelines etc. Email: drkohli@medicaldialogues.in. Contact no. 011-43720751