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The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of the use of a new model of spectacles designed to control the progression of myopia in childhood. School myopia in children is mainly produced by increased ocular growth. This new spectacle design is based in the fact that positive lenses in front of eyes produce changes that decrease ocular growth. It consists of a full field peripheral positive defocus lens and a central section for the distance correction. The study is designed to evaluate tolerance and efficacy of this new lens in myopic children along a two year period.
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The Myofix Defocus Study is a longitudinal, prospective, interventional, non-randomized research study intended to evaluate the tolerability and effectiveness of the use of spectacles with special design to control the progression of myopia during childhood. This field study included children aged 8 to 15 years old who voluntarily agreed to use the Defocus Spectacles for one year. A pair of spectacles (Myofix, Novar, Argentina) with frames (Usual, Argentina) were provided free of charge to all children studied for one year with the special addendum of peripheral defocus treatment. Children are instructed to wear the glasses the whole day every day of the week including Saturdays and Sundays.The Argentinian Defocus Spectacle lens design preserves the principle of the original design presented by Carly Lam et al., which consisted of a 9 mm central zone for distance correction and a +3.50 diopters defocus correction ring of lenslets laying between 9 and 32 mm diameter to act primarily on the para foveal zone that detects the defocus that governs the growth of the eye. Instead of micro peripheral defocus lenses in the 32 mm diameter ring zone with treatment, our model has a uniform peripheral +/+3.50 diopters power zone add. As it is known that 30-40 minutes of exposure to myopic defocus modifies the axial length (measured with Lenstar) by approximately 10-15 microns due to changes in choroidal thickness, the national design has been tested on 17 volunteer subjects showing a significant change of 11 microns shortening in the axial length of their eyes, such that that pilot study suggested the lenses could be effective in arresting the progression of myopia, as changes in the choroid are the first events in the retinal message that manages ocular growth. For comparing the outcomes of this study two virtual control groups in American children will be considered. One control group will be taken from a study in US giving children diluted atropine drops for myopia control. The placebo treated arm of this group will be considered. The other control group will be a cohort of children followed up in Argentina with cycloplegic refractions one year before the pandemic closeup began.
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47 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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