Tomographic and Refractive Characteristics of Pediatric First-Degree Relatives of Keratoconus Patients
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Elsevier Inc.
Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the tomographic and refractive characteristics of pediatric first-degree relatives of patients with keratoconus. Design: Cross-sectional study. Methods: SETTING: Department of Ophthalmology at the American University of Beirut Medical, Beirut, Lebanon. STUDY POPULATION: Pediatric first-degree relatives of patients with keratoconus. Both eyes of all participants aged between 6 and 18 years were included and studied. EXCLUSION CRITERIA: Soft contact lens use in the past 2 weeks or rigid gas-permeable lens wear within 4 weeks, history of prior ocular surgery or infectious keratitis, and unreliable corneal tomography. MASKING AND RANDOMIZATION: Two masked cornea and refractive surgeons of different training backgrounds independently evaluated the participants' tomographic outputs. Additionally, the tomographic data were analyzed using Smadja's decision tree. OBSERVATION PROCEDURES: Scheimpflug tomography, manifest refraction, and slit-lamp examination. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Anterior curvature indices, posterior elevation values, thinnest pachymetry, and subjective and objective tomographic interpretation. Results: One hundred eighty-three subjects were recruited. Tomographic evaluation after Cohen's kappa coefficient analysis revealed 32 patients as having keratoconus (17.5%), while 35 patients (19.1%) were labeled as keratoconus by objective analysis. There were 11.5%-15.5% of patients with keratoconus aged less than 11 years, 18.0% aged 12-15 years, and 25.5% aged 16-18 years. Their respective steepest anterior curvature and thinnest pachymetry are 44.8 ± 6.5 diopters (D) and 515.9 ± 39.2 μm, 47.34 ± 3.4 D and 496.1 ± 37.9 μm, and 49.7 ± 6.1 D and 486.0 ± 66.5 μm. A total of 37.5% of the keratoconus patients were unilateral as evaluated by tomography alone. Conclusions: The prevalence of keratoconus in pediatric first-degree relatives of diagnosed keratoconus patients is high. Screening in this high-risk group is warranted. © 2019 Elsevier Inc.
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Keywords
Adolescent, Child, Cornea, Corneal pachymetry, Corneal topography, Cross-sectional studies, Family, Female, Humans, Keratoconus, Lebanon, Male, Prevalence, Refraction, ocular, Retrospective studies, Adult, Age, Article, Bacterial keratitis, Child health, Cornea thickness, Corneal tomography, Cross-sectional study, Eye examination, Eye refraction, Eye surgery, First-degree relative, Human, Priority journal, Slit lamp microscopy, Keratometry, Pathology, Pathophysiology, Physiology, Procedures, Retrospective study