IMI – Defining and Classifying Myopia: A Proposed Set of Standards for Clinical and Epidemiologic Studies
Temple Street Children's University Hospital · Technological University Dublin · +13 more institutions
Abstract
Critical review of current terminology and choice of myopia thresholds was done to ensure that the proposed standards are appropriate for clinical research purposes, relevant to the underlying biology of myopia, acceptable to researchers in the field, and useful for developing health policy.
We recommend that the many descriptive terms of myopia be consolidated into the following descriptive categories: myopia, secondary myopia, axial myopia, and refractive myopia. To provide a framework for research into myopia prevention, the condition of "pre-myopia" is defined. As a quantitative trait, we recommend that myopia be divided into myopia (i.e., all myopia), low myopia, and high myopia. The current consensus threshold value for myopia is a spherical equivalent refractive error ≤ -0.50 diopters (D), but this carries significant risks of classification bias. The current consensus threshold value for high myopia is a spherical equivalent refractive error ≤ -6.00 D. "Pathologic myopia" is proposed as the categorical term for the adverse, structural complications of myopia. A clinical classification is proposed to encompass the scope of such structural complications.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.63
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 40
Authors
10- DIDaniel Ian FlitcroftCorresponding
Temple Street Children's University Hospital, Technological University Dublin
- MHMingguang He
The University of Melbourne, Centre for Eye Research Australia
- JBJost B. Jonas
Heidelberg University, University Hospital Heidelberg
- MJMonica Jong
Brien Holden Vision Institute, UNSW Sydney
- KNKovin Naidoo
Brien Holden Vision Institute, UNSW Sydney
Topics & keywords
- Optometry
- Set (abstract data type)
- Medicine
- Computer science
- Programming language