Myopia Profile

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Measuring the whole eye in myopia

Posted on March 14th 2021 by Kate Gifford

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In this article:

In measuring the myopic eye, refraction is crucial, as is increasing support for measuring axial length. Does the cornea change in myopia too?

Axial length (AXL) has been well established as the critical measurement in examining the progression and control of myopia in a research setting. It is accepted as the gold standard in understanding efficacy of myopia control treatments and as a clinical measure, it could be up to 10 times more sensitive to detect myopia progression than refraction.1 AXL also appears to be the key risk factor for lifelong myopia pathology; more so than refraction.2 However, most eye care practitioners don't routinely measure AXL in clinical practice, mainly due to lack of access to the instrumentation and its expense. How well does AXL represent what's happening with the young myopic eye? What else is important in measuring the whole eye in myopia?

Is axial length more important than refraction?

The average axial length of an emmetropic eye is 16.5 mm at birth3 and increases to around 23.5 mm in adulthood.4 Put simply, longer eyes are at greater lifelong risk of myopia associated pathologies and resultant vision impairment. While the risk of pathology associated with myopia increases with each dioptre of myopia,5 the 'line in the sand' for AXL appears to be around 26mm.

In an analysis of more than 15,000 Dutch individuals by Tideman et al, an axial length of 26mm or more was associated with a one-in-three chance of vision impairment by age 75; axial length of 30mm or more was associated with a 90% frequency of vision impairment. The same analysis found that while there was a strong correlation between axial length and spherical equivalent – refraction explained about 70% of the variation in axial length – when both were considered in a model of risk, axial length maintained the significant association with visual impairment while spherical equivalent did not.2

In this paper, 26mm or greater axial length delineated significant increase in vision impairment risk, and 26mm was equivalent to around 5D of myopia.2 The low-to-moderate myope, though, cannot be presumed to have an axial length below 26mm, as variation exists due to cornea and crystalline lens power in the individual.

Axial length changes in myopia

As an absolute measure, the Singapore Cohort Study of the Risk Factors for Myopia (SCORM) found that myopia onset related closely to axial length across different ages of onset, being 24.08±0.67mm in boys and 23.69±0.69mm in girls.6 A single measurement of AXL is also a stronger indicator for disease risk in myopes of all ages than refraction.2 For example, an annual retinal examination through dilated pupils may not be as necessary for a 4D myope with a 24.5mm axial length as it is for a 4D myope with a 26mm axial length.

As a repeated measure, axial length increases by around 0.1mm per year in emmetropic children according to the large scale Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) study where children aged 6 to 14 years at baseline were followed for up to 10 years. By comparison, children who became myopic showed axial growth of more than 0.3mm in the year just prior to myopia onset, and then around 0.2 to 0.3mm absolute change in the years thereafter.7


Axial length growth charts

The likely future of judging the success of a myopia control strategy based on axial length will fall to percentile growth charts. Varying by age, gender and ethnicity, growth charts for axial length have already been published for Dutch children8 and Chinese children.9 Authors of the Dutch percentile growth charts emphasised that axial lengths which are on the 75th percentile or higher are at risk of high myopia, and hence greater risk of vision impairment. These same authors have recently reported utilizing the 75% percentile delineator to determine individuals who would be treated with high dose atropine (0.5%). On follow up every six months, the axial length was measured and plotted on the growth charts, with a reduced percentile result for an individual indicating successful treatment. The authors reported that plotting this “visualisation of the reduction in axial length percentile [was] an enormous stimulus for patients to adhere to treatment.”10

In developing these growth charts, the authors highlighted that more datasets would require additional analysis to ensure robustness, with gender and ethnicity both requiring specific consideration.8, 9

Does corneal curvature change in myopia?

The CLEERE study compared children who became myopic up to 5 years prior to onset, and for 5 years afterwards. Analysis of corneal curvature found little difference between emmetropes and myopes – the children who became myopic had slightly steeper corneas but by less than 0.25D. Corneal power changed minimally over the ten years of follow up in both emmetropic and ‘became-myopic’ children, varying by less than a dioptre.11

So if the corneal curvature isn't changing much in myopia, why measure it? The key reason is to delineate progressive myopia which could be due to corneal steepening and potential early keratoconus. Increasing astigmatism can also be a trigger to monitor for keratoconus risk.

The Northern Ireland Childhood Errors of Refraction (NICER) Study quantified rates of astigmatism (>1.00DC) in white school children and found a similar prevalence across age groups from 6-to-7 years up to 15-to-16 years of around 18%. The prevalence in two groups who were 6- to 7-years old and 12- to 13-years-old at baseline was stable when measured again three years later, although 10-17% lost their astigmatism and around 10% became astigmatic who weren’t before.12 Another cross-sectional study in Australian children of diverse ethnicities also suggested that astigmatism was stable between 6 and 12 years of age, with 88% of corneal astigmatism being with-the-rule.13

Astigmatism progression in myopia is NOT normal

This indicates that progression of childhood astigmatism is not typical, as it is for childhood myopia progression. The NICER Study found that less than 3% in both age cohort groups showed an increase of >1D of astigmatism over three years. Increasing with-the-rule astigmatism in the older cohort (12- to 13-years-old at baseline) was weakly correlated with a myopic shift in the spherical component of refraction, with around 0.3D of increasing cyl for each 1D of myopia.

Data from the Singapore Cohort Study Of the Risk Factors for Myopia (SCORM) Study undertaken in 7-to 9-year-old children (Chinese, Malay and Asian Indian ethnicity) found 12% had astigmatism of 1D or more. With-the-rule progression per year was 0.01D over three years, higher in Chinese children of 0.02D/yr; the oblique component of astigmatism did not progress. Myopic children had a higher prevalence of astigmatism at baseline, but still only averaged 0.06D of WTR astigmatic progression per year.14

The sum total of this data is that astigmatism progression in myopic children aged 6-12 years is NOT typical - progression of 0.50DC or more over three years is unusual and measurement of keratometry and/or corneal topography is useful in these cases to rule out corneal ectasia.

Crystalline lens changes in myopia

The CLEERE study reported that the crystalline lens thickness of children who became myopic became significantly thinner than emmetropes one year before myopia onset, with the resultant reduced lens power difference persisting thereafter to five years after onset.11 This reduction in lens power indicates an attempt at compensating for increasing axial length.

Will we still need refraction measures in myopia?

Yes, of course! Refraction provides a summary measurement of all ocular structures, and is routinely and universally measured for all myopes. Refraction is the visible outcome and functional impact of myopia for parents and young patients, so will remain an important part of the clinical picture and communication process. While axial length measurement by laser interferometry techniques can be up to 10 times more accurate than refraction, the International Myopia Institute agreed that refractive error should be used in conjunction with axial length measurement to evaluate success of treatments.1

If you're not yet measuring axial length in practice, you could consider collaborating with a colleague primary eye care practitioner and/or local ophthalmologist as best suits your patient base and mode of practice. In the meantime, for guidance on how to gauge success on the basis of short-term changes in refraction, the blog Gauging success in myopia management details how to balance analysis of scientific outcomes with clinical communication.

Take home messages

  • Axial length appears to be the stronger risk factor than refraction for future myopia-associated vision impairment, hence the key measure to control in myopia management
  • Axial length measurement with interferometry techniques can be up to 10 times more accurate than refraction to detect changes in myopia - but we will still always need refraction as part of the clinical picture too
  • Growth charts for axial length have been published in some populations and are being further developed, which is the likely future of judging how an individual's axial length changes against expected norms
  • It is NOT typical for corneal astigmatism to progress as childhood myopia does. If you notice this, further assessment of the cornea with keratometry and/or topography is required.

Further reading


Meet the Authors:

About Kate Gifford

Dr Kate Gifford is an internationally renowned clinician-scientist optometrist and peer educator, and a Visiting Research Fellow at Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia. She holds a PhD in contact lens optics in myopia, four professional fellowships, over 100 peer reviewed and professional publications, and has presented more than 200 conference lectures. Kate is the Chair of the Clinical Management Guidelines Committee of the International Myopia Institute. In 2016 Kate co-founded Myopia Profile with Dr Paul Gifford; the world-leading educational platform on childhood myopia management. After 13 years of clinical practice ownership, Kate now works full time on Myopia Profile.

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