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Title: Association of Contact Lens Adherence With Visual Outcome in the Infant Aphakia Treatment Study: A Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial. Author: Cromelin CH, Drews-Botsch C, Russell B, Lambert SR, Infant Aphakia Treatment Study Group. Journal: JAMA Ophthalmol; 2018 Mar 01; 136(3):279-285. PubMed ID: 29423513. Abstract: IMPORTANCE: Although contact lenses have been used for decades to optically correct eyes in children after cataract surgery, there has never been a prospective study looking at contact lens adherence in children with aphakia, to our knowledge. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate contact lens adherence and its association with visual outcome in a cohort of children treated for unilateral cataract surgery. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Secondary analysis of a multicenter randomized clinical trial of 57 infants born from August 22, 2004, to April 25, 2008, who were randomized to 1 of 2 treatments and followed up to age 5 years. Data analysis was performed from August 9, 2016, to December 7, 2017. INTERVENTIONS: Unilateral cataract extraction and randomization to implantation of an intraocular lens vs contact lens to correct aphakia. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Contact lens adherence was assessed by a 48-hour recall telephone interview that was administered every 3 months starting 3 months after surgery to age 5 years. A traveling examiner assessed visual acuity in patients at aged 4.5 years. Adherence to prescribed contact lens use was estimated as the mean percentage of waking hours as reported in 2 or more interviews for each year of life. RESULTS: Of 57 infants who were randomized to contact lens treatment, 32 (56%) were girls, and 49 (86%) were white. A total of 872 telephone interviews were completed. In year 1, a median of 95% participants wore their contacts lenses nearly all waking hours (interquartile range [IQR], 84%-100%); year 2, 93% (IQR, 85%-99%); year 3, 93% (IQR, 85%-99%); year 4, 93% (IQR, 75%-99%); and year 5, 89% (IQR, 71%-97%). There was a tendency for poorer reported adherence at older ages (F = 3.86, P < .001). No differences were identified when the results were analyzed by sex, insurance coverage, or age at cataract surgery. Using linear regression, children who wore the contact lens for a greater proportion of waking hours during the entire study period tended to have better visual acuity at age 4.5 years, even after accounting for adherence to patching (partial correlation = -0.026; P = .08). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: These results confirm that it is possible to achieve a high level of aphakic contact lens adherence over a 5-year period in children. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00212134.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]