| Literature DB >> 22363476 |
Nicky Cockburn1, David Steven, Karin Lecuona, Francois Joubert, Graeme Rogers, Colin Cook, Sarah Polack.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To estimate the prevalence and causes of blindness and visual impairment in Cape Town, South Africa and to explore socio-economic and demographic predictors of vision loss in this setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22363476 PMCID: PMC3282720 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030718
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Age and gender distribution of the survey sample and census population.
| Male | Female | Total | ||||||||||
| Age | Sample | Census | Sample | Census | Sample | Census | ||||||
| 50–59 | 464 | (45%) | 134,296 | (52%) | 773 | (45%) | 134138 | (44%) | 1,237 | (45%) | 268,434 | (48%) |
| 60–69 | 322 | (31%) | 78,675 | (31%) | 494 | (29%) | 99,909 | (33%) | 816 | (30%) | 178,584 | (32%) |
| 70–79 | 178 | (17%) | 31,948 | (13%) | 290 | (17%) | 55,182 | (18%) | 468 | (17%) | 87,130 | (16%) |
| 80+ | 68 | (7%) | 11,336 | (4%) | 155 | (9%) | 15,944 | (5%) | 223 | (8%) | 27,280 | (5%) |
Estimated prevalence of blindness (VA<3/60), severe visual impairment (VA<6/60–3/60) and visual impairment (VA<6/80–6/60) in Cape Town by person and eyes with available correction.
| Male | Female | Total | ||||
| VA with available correction | N | Prevalence (95% CI) | n | Prevalence (95% CI) | n | Prevalence (95% CI) |
| Blind | ||||||
| Persons | 11 | 1.1% (0.4–1.7) | 26 | 1.5% (0.9–2.1) | 37 | 1.4% (0.9–1.8) |
| Eyes | 94 | 4.5% (3.5–5.5) | 150 | 4.4% (3.4–5.3) | 242 | 4.4% (3.9–4.9) |
| Severe visual impairment | ||||||
| Persons | 6 | 0.6% (0.1–1.0) | 21 | 1.2% (0.7–1.7) | 27 | 0.9% (0.6–1.4) |
| Eyes | 24 | 1.2% (0.7–1.7) | 72 | 2.1% (1.5–2.7) | 96 | 1.8% (1.4–2.1) |
| Visual impairment | ||||||
| Persons | 43 | 4.1% (2.9–5.2) | 91 | 5.3% (4.2–6.4) | 134 | 4.9% (4.1–5.7) |
| Eyes | 122 | 5.9% (4.8–7.0) | 248 | 7.2% (6.1–8.4) | 372 | 6.8% (6.1–7.4) |
CI, Confidence Interval; VA, Visual Acuity;
NB: data for persons refers to VA in the better eye.
Principal cause of bilateral blindness (VA<3/60), bilateral severe visual impairment (VA<6/60–3/60) and bilateral visual impairment (VA<6/80–6/60) among persons with available correction.
| Blindness | Severe Visual impairment | Visual impairment | ||||
| n | % | n | % | n | % | |
| Refractive error | 0 | (0%) | 6 | (22%) | 67 | (50%) |
| Cataract, untreated | 10 | (27%) | 10 | (37%) | 36 | (27%) |
| Aphakia uncorrected | 1 | (3%) | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) |
| Cataract surgical complications | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) | 2 | (2%) |
| Phthisis | 1 | (3%) | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) |
| Other corneal scar | 1 | (3%) | 1 | (3%) | 1 | (1%) |
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|
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| ( |
| ( |
| Diabetic retinopathy | 3 | (8%) | 3 | (11%) | 3 | (2%) |
| Glaucoma | 4 | (11%) | 2 | (7%) | 8 | (6%) |
| Age related macular degeneration | 4 | (11%) | 2 | (7%) | 2 | (2%) |
| Other posterior segment | 13 | (35%) | 7 | (13%) | 24 | (18%) |
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| (65%) |
| ( |
| ( |
VA, Visual Acuity.
Avoidable causes: Cataract (including un-operated cataract and postoperative complications), refractive error, trachoma, and other causes of corneal scars.
Cataract surgical coverage* by persons and eyes.
| Persons | Eyes | |
|
| ||
| Male | 96% | 82% |
| Female | 96% | 83% |
| Total | 96% | 83% |
|
| ||
| Male | 94% | 79% |
| Female | 93% | 79% |
| Total | 93% | 79% |
|
| ||
| Male | 81% | 68% |
| Female | 80% | 64% |
| Total | 80% | 65% |
VA, Visual Acuity.
*Cataract surgical coverage is the proportion of persons (or eyes) with ‘operable’ cataract who have received cataract surgery.
Visual acuity outcome after cataract surgery (eyes) with available correction.
| Non-IOL eyes | IOL eyes | Total | ||||
| Outcome | n | % | n | % | n | % |
|
| ||||||
| Good | 1 | 17% | 271 | 80% | 272 | 80% |
| Borderline | 2 | 33% | 39 | 12% | 41 | 11% |
| Poor | 3 | 50% | 28 | 8% | 31 | 9% |
|
| ||||||
| Good | 2 | 33% | 287 | 85% | 289 | 84% |
| Borderline | 1 | 17% | 25 | 7% | 26 | 8% |
| Poor | 3 | 50% | 26 | 8% | 29 | 8% |
WHO classification of visual outcome after cataract surgery. Good: VA>6/18; borderline: VA 6/18–6/60; poor: VA<6/60.
The relationship between demographic and socio-economic characteristics and vision loss (bilateral VA<6/18 with available correction).
| VA<6/18 | Unadjusted | Multivariate adjusted | |||
| Total | n | % | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
|
| |||||
| 50–59 | 1240 | 71 | 5.7% | Reference | Reference |
| 60–69 | 817 | 40 | 4.9% | 0.8 (0.6–1.3) | 0.9 (0.6–1.4) |
| 70–79 | 468 | 33 | 7.1% | 1.3 (0.8–1.9) | 1.3 (0.8–2.1) |
| 80+ | 223 | 53 | 23.8% | 5.1 (3.5–7.6) | 6.9 (4.6–10.6) |
|
| <0.001 | <0.001 | |||
|
| |||||
| Male | 1034 | 59 | 5.7% | Reference | Reference |
| Female | 1712 | 138 | 8.1% | 1.4 (1.1–1.9) | 1.2 (0.9–1.6) |
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| |||||
| Poorest | 890 | 107 | 12.0% | 4.5 (1.3–3.9) | 3.9 (2.2–6.7) |
| Medium | 984 | 58 | 6.5% | 3.0 (1.3–3.9) | 1.8 (1.0–3.3) |
| Wealthiest | 852 | 25 | 2.9% | Reference | Reference |
|
| <0.001 | <0.001 | |||
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| |||||
| None | 172 | 26 | 15.1% | 11.8 (4.0–34.4) | 5.4 (1.7–16.6) |
| Primary | 1473 | 116 | 7.9% | 5.6 (2.2–14.4) | 3.3 (1.3–8.6) |
| Secondary | 42 | 42 | 5.6% | 3.9 (1.5–10.3) | 2.9 (1.2–7.4) |
| Higher | 268 | 4 | 1.5% | Reference | Reference |
|
| <0.001 | 0.008 | |||
VA, Visual Acuity.
Odds ratios from multivariate logistic regression analysis including all listed variables.
Socio-economic status.
Figure 1Cataract surgical coverage by socio-economic status.
Cataract surgical coverage was defined as the proportion of people needing cataract surgery at VA<6/60 who had received it.