Current and Emerging Strategies for Myopia Control in Children: A Comprehensive Evidence-Based Review
Aldo Vagge, Matteo Baldi, Maria Musolino, Veronica Rivarone, Carlo Catti, Michele Iester

TL;DR
This paper reviews current and emerging methods to control myopia in children, emphasizing effective interventions and proactive management strategies.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive evidence-based review of myopia control strategies, highlighting novel interventions and combination therapies.
Findings
Outdoor exposure and specific spectacle/contact lens designs effectively slow myopia progression.
Low-dose atropine and red-light therapy show promise but require further long-term safety studies.
Combination therapies offer additive benefits for children with inadequate monotherapy response.
Abstract
Myopia has emerged as a global public health crisis, with prevalence exceeding 80% in East Asian urban populations and rising rapidly worldwide. High myopia substantially increases the lifetime risk of sight-threatening complications, including myopic macular degeneration, retinal detachment, and glaucoma. Multiple interventions have been investigated to slow myopia progression in children. Behavioral strategies, particularly increased outdoor exposure, demonstrate protective effects against myopia onset and may modestly slow progression, whereas several historically used approaches show no clinically meaningful benefit. Spectacle lens interventions include simultaneous defocus designs (e.g., DIMS, HALT, CARE) and contrast-modulating diffusion optics (DOT) lenses; collectively, these technologies have demonstrated consistent and clinically meaningful reductions in axial elongation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOphthalmology and Visual Impairment Studies · Corneal surgery and disorders · Retinopathy of Prematurity Studies
