# Longitudinal changes in macular curvature and axial elongation in school children

**Authors:** Mikiko Honbou, Takehiro Yamashita, Hiroto Terasaki, Ryo Asaoka, Naoya Yoshihara, Naoko Kakiuchi, Taiji Sakamoto

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40942-025-00752-8 · 2025-11-25

## TL;DR

The study shows that changes in macular curvature in children are linked to eye growth, suggesting it could predict future eye length changes.

## Contribution

The study identifies macular curvature as a potential predictor of axial elongation in children.

## Key findings

- Macular curvature increased significantly from 8–9 to 14–15 years of age.
- Eyes with lower initial macular curvature experienced greater axial elongation over six years.
- Macular curvature changes were positively correlated with axial elongation.

## Abstract

To investigate the relationship between changes in macular curvature and axial elongation in school children.

This prospective cohort study involved 75 right eyes of elementary school students for six years (from 8 to 9 to 14–15 years). In the first and last year, all participants underwent optical axial length measurement and color fundus photographs. Optical coherence tomographic vertical cross-sectional images of the macula were taken and used for the analysis. The macular curvature was plotted as the retinal pigment epithelium and fitted to a second-degree polynomial equation using ImageJ software to calculate the macular curvature. Wilcoxon’s signed rank test was used to compare macular curvature and axial length. The association between axial elongation and macular curvature was investigated using Spearman’s correlation.

The mean axial length in the last year (24.82 mm) was significantly greater than that in the first year (23.34 mm). Likewise, the mean macular curvature was significantly greater in the last year (0.041) than in the first year (0.014). Macular curvature in the first year was significantly negatively correlated with axial elongation over 6 years (r=-0.28, p = 0.014). The change in macular curvature was significantly positively correlated with axial elongation (r = 0.28, p = 0.017).

During the period from 8 to 9 years to 14–15 years of age, the macular curvature increased, and eyes with smaller macular curvature at 8–9 years tended to have greater axial elongation. Macular curvature can be a predictor of axial elongation during this period.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** systemic diseases (MESH:D034721), Myopia (MESH:D009216), irregular ocular enlargements (MESH:D008599), hyperopia (MESH:D006956), ocular trauma (MESH:D014947), axial elongation (MESH:C537791), refractive error (MESH:D012030), staphyloma (MESH:C536352), macular staphyloma (MESH:D008268)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12648928/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12648928