| Literature DB >> 29844360 |
Yijie Wang1, Yufeng Xu1, Xi Liu1, Lixia Lou1, Juan Ye2.
Abstract
Congenital ptosis may be associated with abnormalities of visual development and function, including amblyopia, strabismus and refractive errors. However, the prevalence estimates of these abnormalities vary widely. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to estimate the prevalence of amblyopia, strabismus and refractive errors in congenital ptosis. Cochrane, Pubmed, Medline, Embase, and Web of Science were searched by July 2017. We used random/fixed effects models based on a proportion approach to estimate the prevalence. Heterogeneity would be considered signifcant if the p values less than 0.1 and/or I2 greater than 50%. Subgroup analyses, meta-regression analyses and sensitivity analyses were utilized to explore the potential sources of it. A total of 24 studies selected from 3,633 references were included. The highest prevalence was revealed for myopia with 30.2% (95%CI 3.0-69.8%), followed by 22.7% (95%CI 18.5-27.8%) for amblyopia, 22.2% (95%CI 7.8-63.1%) for astigmatism, 19.6% (95%CI 16.5-23.2%) for strabismus, 17.3% (95% CI 13.1-22.9%) for anisometropia and 4.0% for hyperopia (95%CI 1.8-7.1%). Significant heterogeneity was identified across most estimates. Our findings suggest that amblyopia, strabismus and refractive errors in congenital ptosis are present in much higher percentage. This study highlights the importance of early diagnosis and timely treatment of patients with congenital ptosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29844360 PMCID: PMC5974416 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-26671-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart of study selection process.
Characteristics of the included study.
| Study | Disease | Region | Publication | Study Design | Setting | Mean age (year) | Male ratio | Time span (year) | sample | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson RL[ | strabismus | USA | 1980 | cross-sectional study | hospital-based | NA | NA | 3 | 113 | 8 |
| Anderson RL[ | amblyopia | USA | 1980 | cross-sectional study | hospital-based | NA | NA | 3 | 123 | 8 |
| Griepentrog GJ[ | amblyopia | USA | 2013 | retrospective study | population-based | 1.3 | 1.29 | 40 | 96 | 7 |
| Griepentrog GJ[ | strabismus | USA | 2014 | retrospective study | population-based | 1.3 | 1.29 | 40 | 96 | 7 |
| Berry-Brincat A[ | amblyopia | UK | 2009 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 3.91 | 1.5 | 10 | 155 | 8 |
| Dray JP[ | amblyopia | France | 2002 | retrospective study | hospital-based | NA | NA | 12 | 130 | 6 |
| Gautam P[ | amblyopia | Nepal | 2016 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 23 | NA | 2 | 170 | 4 |
| Júnior G[ | strabismus | Brasil | 2011 | cross-sectional study | hospital-based | 7.2 | 2 | 10 | 42 | 4 |
| Harrad RA[ | amblyopia | UK | 1988 | retrospective study | hospital-based | NA | NA | 5 | 216 | 4 |
| Hornblass A[ | amblyopia | USA | 1995 | retrospective study | hospital-based | NA | NA | 14 | 36 | 7 |
| Ho YF[ | strabismus | Taiwan | 2017 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 3.86 | 1.8 | 10 | 319 | 7 |
| Merriam WW[ | amblyopia | USA | 1980 | retrospective study | hospital-based | NA | NA | 3 | 65 | 8 |
| Skaat A[ | amblyopia | Israel | 2013 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 0.83 | 1.31 | 11 | 162 | 6 |
| Srinagesh V[ | amblyopia | USA | 2011 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 2.5 | NA | 4 | 92 | 7 |
| Handor H[ | amblyopia | Morocco | 2014 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 10 | 1.75 | 7 | 44 | 6 |
| Huo L[ | amblyopia | China | 2012 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 16.83 | NA | 12 | 85 | 7 |
| Abolfazl K[ | amblyopia | Iran | 2010 | cross-sectional study | hospital-based | NA | 1.56 | 2 | 100 | 7 |
| Lin LK[ | amblyopia | USA | 2008 | retrospective study | hospital-based | NA | 1.77 | 7 | 130 | 6 |
| Stark N[ | amblyopia | German | 1984 | retrospective study | hospital-based | NA | NA | 6 | 54 | 5 |
| Stein A[ | amblyopia | USA | 2014 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 1.54 | NA | 18 | 84 | 7 |
| Thapa R[ | amblyopia | Nepal | 2010 | cross-sectional study | hospital-based | 16 | NA | 1 | 78 | 8 |
| Hashemi H[ | amblyopia | Iran | 2015 | cross-sectional study | population-based | 7 | 1.41 | 1 | 58 | 9 |
| Rong H[ | amblyopia | China | 2016 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 7.4 | NA | 2 | 187 | 8 |
| Yalaz M[ | refractive errors | Turkey | 1996 | retrospective study | hospital-based | 15.75 | 1.55 | 5 | 39 | 4 |
NA, Not Available.
Figure 2Pooled prevalence of amblyopia in congenital ptosis.
Subgroup analyses for prevalence of amblyopia and strabismus in congenital ptosis.
| Subgroup | Number of studies | Estimated prevalence (%; 95% CI) | I2 (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Year of publication | Before 2000 | 5 | 0.227 (0.133, 0.386) | 88.2 |
| 2000–2009 | 3 | 0.240 (0.201, 0.287) | 0.0 | |
| After 2009 | 11 | 0.219 (0.163, 0.295) | 84.9 | |
| Region | America | 7 | 0.198 (0.167, 0.235) | 0.0 |
| Europe | 4 | 0.270 (0.172, 0.424) | 89.6 | |
| Asia | 7 | 0.228 (0.155, 0.338) | 88.9 | |
| Africa | 1 | 0.250 (0.142, 0.440) | NA | |
| Study design | Cross-sectional study | 4 | 0.298 (0.195, 0.455) | 84.6 |
| Retrospective study | 15 | 0.210 (0.167, 0.263) | 81.1 | |
| Setting | hospital-based | 17 | 0.222 (0.181, 0.272) | 80.1 |
| population-based | 2 | 0.271 (0.084, 0.876) | 93.6 | |
| Sample size (patients) | < 100 | 10 | 0.237 (0.170, 0.331) | 82.3 |
| ≥ 100 | 9 | 0.217 (0.167, 0.281) | 83.6 | |
| Time span (years) | < 10 | 12 | 0.247 (0.188, 0.323) | 86.1 |
| ≥ 10 | 7 | 0.201 (0.168, 0.241) | 24.2 | |
| Quality | 4–7 (moderate quality) | 13 | 0.208 (0.159, 0.272) | 82.8 |
| 8–11 (high quality) | 6 | 0.270 (0.199, 0.366) | 80.8 | |
|
| 19 | 0.227 (0.185, 0.278) | 82.7 | |
|
| ||||
| Year of publication | Before 2000 | 4 | 0.240 (0.177, 0.325) | 61.8 |
| 2000–2009 | 2 | 0.151 (0.113, 0.202) | 0.0 | |
| After 2009 | 7 | 0.186 (0.150, 0.231) | 41.9 | |
| Region | America | 6 | 0.182 (0.127, 0.261) | 68.3 |
| Europe | 3 | 0.195 (0.140, 0.270) | 56.4 | |
| Asia | 4 | 0.203 (0.155, 0.266) | 56.0 | |
| Study design | Cross-sectional study | 4 | 0.270 (0.209, 0.349) | 28.5 |
| Retrospective study | 9 | 0.177 (0.155, 0.201) | 6.0 | |
| Setting | hospital-based | 11 | 0.200 (0.165, 0.242) | 62.3 |
| population-based | 2 | 0.162 (0.109, 0.241) | 0.0 | |
| Sample size (patients) | <100 | 7 | 0.198 (0.150, 0.261) | 44.5 |
| ≥100 | 6 | 0.193 (0.153, 0.244) | 70.1 | |
| Time span (years) | <10 | 8 | 0.214 (0.167, 0.273) | 62.2 |
| ≥10 | 5 | 0.170 (0.144, 0.200) | 0.0 | |
| Quality | 4–7 (moderate quality) | 8 | 0.182 (0.159, 0.208) | 3.5 |
| 8–11 (high quality) | 5 | 0.217 (0.152, 0.310) | 71.4 | |
|
| 13 | 0.196 (0.165, 0.232) | 56.9 | |
Meta-regression analyses for prevalence of amblyopia and strabismus in congenital ptosis.
| Meta-regression coefficient (%) | 95%CI | p | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Year of publication, continuous | −0.002 | (−0.021, 0.018) | 0.839 |
| Region (Asia vs others) | 0.049 | (−0.446, 0.544) | 0.836 |
| Study design | 0.353 | (−0.186, 0.891) | 0.185 |
| Setting | 0.262 | (−0.497, 1.021) | 0.476 |
| Sample size, continuous | −0.003 | (−0.007, 0.002) | 0.213 |
| Time span, continuous | −0.016 | (−0.043, 0.011) | 0.221 |
| Quality, continuous | 0.127 | (−0.041, 0.294) | 0.130 |
|
| |||
| Year of publication, continuous | −0.011 | (−0.023, 0.001) | 0.061 |
| Region (Asia vs others) | 0.065 | (−0.361, 0.491) | 0.744 |
| Study design | 0.467 | (0.183, 0.751) | 0.004 |
| Setting | −0.205 | (−0.815, 0.404) | 0.474 |
| Sample size, continuous | −0.001 | (−0.003, 0.001) | 0.388 |
| Time span, continuous | −0.012 | (−0.032, 0.008) | 0.231 |
| Quality, continuous | 0.004 | (−0.131, 0.139) | 0.947 |
Figure 3Pooled prevalence of strabismus in congenital ptosis.
Figure 4Pooled prevalence of refractive errors in congenital ptosis.