Atropine halts myopia progression

Atropine seems safe and effective in preventing myopic progression in children

Atropine halts myopia progression
Dermot McGrath
Dermot McGrath
Published: Tuesday, June 13, 2017
  A low-dose formulation of atropine slowed the progression of myopia for a majority of treated children over a two-year period with no adverse side effects, according to a study presented at the European Society of Ophthalmology (SOE) 2017  Congress in Barcelona. “Our experience in this small study shows that atropine seems to be safe and effective in preventing myopic progression in children. Before treatment the mean progression was around 0.75D per year compared to 0.32D a year after treatment. Importantly there were no side effects and no patient discomfort associated with its use,” said Yair Morad MD. Dr Morad noted that the best responders seemed to be children with myopia less than -6.0D and no family history of the disease. The most difficult children to treat were those with high myopia and with both parents classed as myopic. As the most common eye disorder in the world, myopia affects between 25% to 50% of all adults in the United States and Europe. In Asia, the disease has reached epidemic proportions, said Dr Morad, with 85% to 90% of young adults affected in that region. The economic burden of the disease is estimated at $268 billion worldwide. Dr Morad’s study started in January 2015 and included 83 children with a mean age of 9.2 years and a mean refraction of -4.7D whose myopia had progressed 0.75D or more in the previous 12 months. All of the children received 0.01% atropine nightly and were examined every six months. After six months, 82 patients progressed between 0 to 0.025D while one patient who progressed 0.75D was switched to atropine 0.05%. At 12 months, 46 out of 56 children showed very little sign of progression, while 8 patients progressed 0.5 D and 2 patients progressed 0.75 D. Dr Morad said that further study was needed to answer questions relating to the optimal time and duration of treatment. He also noted that the high cost of current treatments should be alleviated with the commercialization of Atropine in the near future.  
Latest Articles
ESCRS Today 2025: Happy Anniversaries!

ESCRS celebrates milestones with pioneers in IOLs, LASIK, femtosecond lasers, and corneal transplantation.

Read more...

ESCRS Today 2025: A Congress for Everyone

From YOs to families, the ESCRS Annual Meeting embraces full participation through inclusivity.

Read more...

ESCRS Today 2025: All Eyes on Innovation

Watching out for obstacles and opportunities

Read more...

Beyond the Numbers

Empowering patient participation fosters continuous innovation in cataract surgery.

Read more...

Thinking Beyond the Surgery Room

Practice management workshop focuses on financial operations and AI business applications.

Read more...

Aid Cuts Threaten Global Eye Care Progress

USAID closure leads retreat in development assistance.

Read more...

Supplement: ESCRS Clinical Trends Series: Presbyopia

Read more...

Debate: FS-LASIK or KLEx for Hyperopia?

FS-LASIK has more of a track record, but KLEx offers advantages.

Read more...

Four AI Applications Ready for Practice

Commercial offerings may save time, improve practice and research.

Read more...

Perioperative Medication Regimens for Cataract Surgery

Randomised controlled clinical trial results provide evidence-based guidance.

Read more...