TY - JOUR
T1 - Stereopsis following surgery in children with congenital and developmental cataracts
T2 - A systematic review and meta-analysis
AU - Lohia, Kritika
AU - Soans, Rijul Saurabh
AU - Agarwal, Divya
AU - Tandon, Radhika
AU - Saxena, Rohit
AU - Gandhi, Tapan Kumar
N1 - Funding Information:
KL was supported by the Indian Institute of Technology - Delhi, India. RSS was supported by the Visvesvaraya PhD Scheme, MEITY, Govt. of India : MEITY-PHD-1810 and the Graduate School of Medical Sciences, University of Groningen, The Netherlands. RT, RS and TKG have received funding from the Department of Science and Technology - Cognitive Science Research Initiative Project #RP03962G , Govt. of India. The funding organizations had no role in the design, conduct or analysis of this research.
Funding Information:
KL was supported by the Indian Institute of Technology - Delhi, India. RSS was supported by the Visvesvaraya PhD Scheme, MEITY, Govt. of India: MEITY-PHD-1810 and the Graduate School of Medical Sciences, University of Groningen, The Netherlands. RT, RS and TKG have received funding from the Department of Science and Technology - Cognitive Science Research Initiative Project #RP03962G, Govt. of India. The funding organizations had no role in the design, conduct or analysis of this research.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - We estimated the proportion of children with stereopsis following surgery in congenital and developmental cataracts by systematic review and meta-analysis and also considered the factors influencing stereopsis, such as intervention age and presence of strabismus. Stereopsis is directly related to quality of life, and investigating its levels following cataract surgery in children may help decide the right time to intervene, particularly in the context of brain plasticity. We conducted a systematic literature search using Scopus, PubMed, and Web of Science and found 25 case series, 3 cohorts, and 3 clinical trial studies from 1/1/1995 to 31/12/2020. Study-specific proportions of stereopsis from 923 children were pooled using a random-effects model, and stratified analyses were conducted based on intervention age and pre-existing strabismus as a confounder. We appraised the risk of bias using tools published by National Institutes of Health and evaluated publication bias with funnel plots and the Egger test. The pooled proportions of stereopsis based on 8 unilateral and 6 bilateral congenital cataract studies were 0.37 (95% CIs: [0.24, 0.53]) and 0.45 (95% CIs: [0.24,0.68]) when patients with preexisting strabismus were excluded as a confounder. When the intervention age was ≤6 months, proportions in unilateral congenital cataract group significantly increased to 0.52 (95% CIs: [0.37, 0.66]; P = 0.49) compared to 0.26 (95% CIs: [0.14, 0.44]; P = 0.16) otherwise. A similar increase in proportions was found when intervention age ≤4 months. In both unilateral and bilateral congenital cataract groups, proportions increased significantly when the confounder was excluded. Overall, proportions in bilateral congenital cataracts were significantly greater than unilateral cases (irrespective of confounder). Eight unilateral and 5 bilateral developmental cataract studies resulted in pooled proportions of 0.62 (95% CIs: [0.27, 0.88] and 0.82 (95% CIs: [0.4, 0.97]), respectively. Although proportions for bilateral developmental cataracts were greater than unilateral cataracts (irrespective of confounder), results were not statistically significant. Finally, proportions in unilateral developmental cataracts were significantly greater than unilateral congenital cataracts (Z = 7.413, P = 6.173694e−14). We conclude that surgical intervention within first 4–6 months can significantly affect postoperative outcomes in unilateral congenital cataracts. Analysis of existing data does not show a significant effect of intervention age on stereopsis outcomes for developmental cataracts.
AB - We estimated the proportion of children with stereopsis following surgery in congenital and developmental cataracts by systematic review and meta-analysis and also considered the factors influencing stereopsis, such as intervention age and presence of strabismus. Stereopsis is directly related to quality of life, and investigating its levels following cataract surgery in children may help decide the right time to intervene, particularly in the context of brain plasticity. We conducted a systematic literature search using Scopus, PubMed, and Web of Science and found 25 case series, 3 cohorts, and 3 clinical trial studies from 1/1/1995 to 31/12/2020. Study-specific proportions of stereopsis from 923 children were pooled using a random-effects model, and stratified analyses were conducted based on intervention age and pre-existing strabismus as a confounder. We appraised the risk of bias using tools published by National Institutes of Health and evaluated publication bias with funnel plots and the Egger test. The pooled proportions of stereopsis based on 8 unilateral and 6 bilateral congenital cataract studies were 0.37 (95% CIs: [0.24, 0.53]) and 0.45 (95% CIs: [0.24,0.68]) when patients with preexisting strabismus were excluded as a confounder. When the intervention age was ≤6 months, proportions in unilateral congenital cataract group significantly increased to 0.52 (95% CIs: [0.37, 0.66]; P = 0.49) compared to 0.26 (95% CIs: [0.14, 0.44]; P = 0.16) otherwise. A similar increase in proportions was found when intervention age ≤4 months. In both unilateral and bilateral congenital cataract groups, proportions increased significantly when the confounder was excluded. Overall, proportions in bilateral congenital cataracts were significantly greater than unilateral cases (irrespective of confounder). Eight unilateral and 5 bilateral developmental cataract studies resulted in pooled proportions of 0.62 (95% CIs: [0.27, 0.88] and 0.82 (95% CIs: [0.4, 0.97]), respectively. Although proportions for bilateral developmental cataracts were greater than unilateral cataracts (irrespective of confounder), results were not statistically significant. Finally, proportions in unilateral developmental cataracts were significantly greater than unilateral congenital cataracts (Z = 7.413, P = 6.173694e−14). We conclude that surgical intervention within first 4–6 months can significantly affect postoperative outcomes in unilateral congenital cataracts. Analysis of existing data does not show a significant effect of intervention age on stereopsis outcomes for developmental cataracts.
KW - Binocular
KW - Cataract
KW - Congenital
KW - Depth perception
KW - Early blindness
KW - Meta-analysis
KW - Monocular
KW - Stereopsis
KW - Systematic review
U2 - 10.1016/j.survophthal.2022.08.009
DO - 10.1016/j.survophthal.2022.08.009
M3 - Review article
C2 - 35988744
AN - SCOPUS:85138585841
SN - 0039-6257
VL - 68
SP - 126
EP - 241
JO - Survey of Ophthalmology
JF - Survey of Ophthalmology
IS - 1
ER -