Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western India

AIM: To describe the demographics, clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye center in western India. METHODS: This was a retrospective longitudinal hospital-based study of 1382 children aged ≤12y included in the National Institute of OphthalMology AmBl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Ophthalmology
Main Authors: Jai A. Kelkar, Harsh H. Jain, Aditya S. Kelkar, Shreekant Kelkar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Press of International Journal of Ophthalmology (IJO PRESS) 2025-07-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ies.ijo.cn/en_publish/2025/7/20250721.pdf
_version_ 1849688363161878528
author Jai A. Kelkar
Harsh H. Jain
Aditya S. Kelkar
Shreekant Kelkar
author_facet Jai A. Kelkar
Harsh H. Jain
Aditya S. Kelkar
Shreekant Kelkar
author_sort Jai A. Kelkar
collection DOAJ
container_title International Journal of Ophthalmology
description AIM: To describe the demographics, clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye center in western India. METHODS: This was a retrospective longitudinal hospital-based study of 1382 children aged ≤12y included in the National Institute of OphthalMology AmBlyopia StUdy in Indian Paediatric EyeS (NIMBUS) Study. Data on patient demographics, treatment approach, and best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) changes were reviewed. RESULTS: The mean age of the study cohort was 4.54±2.46y, with males constituting the majority (55.4%). The cause of amblyopia was refractive error in 73.2%, strabismus in 7.3%, and anisometropia in 6.8% of eyes. The majority of therapies comprised glasses (74.4%), followed by occlusion+glasses (10.3%), occlusion alone (7.3%), and surgery+patching+glasses (5.1%). The mean occlusion time was 2.46±1.14h. After a median follow-up of 10.00 (6–85)mo, the mean BCVA significantly improved from 0.85±0.41 to 0.55±0.42 logMAR. Subgroup analysis revealed BCVA gain for all etiologies, including refractive errors (P<0.001), strabismus (P<0.001), cataract (P<0.001), and ptosis (P<0.001). Additionally, eyes with refractive errors showed significantly better BCVA than eyes with cataracts (P<0.001), strabismus (P<0.001) and marginally better BCVA than eyes with ptosis (P<0.05), both at the baseline and final visit. CONCLUSION: Refractive errors are the commonest cause of amblyopia, followed by strabismus and anisometropia. Timely detection, optimal therapy, and periodic follow-up are crucial in bettering visual acuity regardless of the cause.
format Article
id doaj-art-e240f6aaecf94dbc8031395c6016112c
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2222-3959
2227-4898
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Press of International Journal of Ophthalmology (IJO PRESS)
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-e240f6aaecf94dbc8031395c6016112c2025-08-20T02:09:24ZengPress of International Journal of Ophthalmology (IJO PRESS)International Journal of Ophthalmology2222-39592227-48982025-07-011871369137410.18240/ijo.2025.07.2120250721Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western IndiaJai A. Kelkar0Harsh H. Jain1Aditya S. Kelkar2Shreekant Kelkar3Jai A. Kelkar. National Institute of Ophthalmology, 1187/30, Ghole Road, Phule Museum, Pune 411005, Maharashtra, India. drjkelkar@gmail.comDepartment of Vitreoretinal Services, National Institute of Ophthalmology, Pune 411005, IndiaDepartment of Vitreoretinal Services, National Institute of Ophthalmology, Pune 411005, IndiaDepartment of General Ophthalmology, National Institute of Ophthalmology, Pune 411005, IndiaAIM: To describe the demographics, clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye center in western India. METHODS: This was a retrospective longitudinal hospital-based study of 1382 children aged ≤12y included in the National Institute of OphthalMology AmBlyopia StUdy in Indian Paediatric EyeS (NIMBUS) Study. Data on patient demographics, treatment approach, and best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) changes were reviewed. RESULTS: The mean age of the study cohort was 4.54±2.46y, with males constituting the majority (55.4%). The cause of amblyopia was refractive error in 73.2%, strabismus in 7.3%, and anisometropia in 6.8% of eyes. The majority of therapies comprised glasses (74.4%), followed by occlusion+glasses (10.3%), occlusion alone (7.3%), and surgery+patching+glasses (5.1%). The mean occlusion time was 2.46±1.14h. After a median follow-up of 10.00 (6–85)mo, the mean BCVA significantly improved from 0.85±0.41 to 0.55±0.42 logMAR. Subgroup analysis revealed BCVA gain for all etiologies, including refractive errors (P<0.001), strabismus (P<0.001), cataract (P<0.001), and ptosis (P<0.001). Additionally, eyes with refractive errors showed significantly better BCVA than eyes with cataracts (P<0.001), strabismus (P<0.001) and marginally better BCVA than eyes with ptosis (P<0.05), both at the baseline and final visit. CONCLUSION: Refractive errors are the commonest cause of amblyopia, followed by strabismus and anisometropia. Timely detection, optimal therapy, and periodic follow-up are crucial in bettering visual acuity regardless of the cause.http://ies.ijo.cn/en_publish/2025/7/20250721.pdfamblyopiarefractive errorpediatricepidemiologyprevalencepatternocular morbiditieswestern india
spellingShingle Jai A. Kelkar
Harsh H. Jain
Aditya S. Kelkar
Shreekant Kelkar
Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western India
amblyopia
refractive error
pediatric
epidemiology
prevalence
pattern
ocular morbidities
western india
title Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western India
title_full Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western India
title_fullStr Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western India
title_full_unstemmed Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western India
title_short Childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western India
title_sort childhood amblyopia in a tertiary eye care center in western india
topic amblyopia
refractive error
pediatric
epidemiology
prevalence
pattern
ocular morbidities
western india
url http://ies.ijo.cn/en_publish/2025/7/20250721.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jaiakelkar childhoodamblyopiainatertiaryeyecarecenterinwesternindia
AT harshhjain childhoodamblyopiainatertiaryeyecarecenterinwesternindia
AT adityaskelkar childhoodamblyopiainatertiaryeyecarecenterinwesternindia
AT shreekantkelkar childhoodamblyopiainatertiaryeyecarecenterinwesternindia