Myopia Control Dose Delivered to Treated Eyes by a Dual-focus Myopia-control Contact Lens

Optom Vis Sci. 2023 Jun 1;100(6):376-387. doi: 10.1097/OPX.0000000000002021. Epub 2023 Apr 24.

Abstract

Purpose: This study examined the optical impact of a DF contact lens during near viewing in a sample of habitual DF lens wearing children.

Methods: Seventeen myopic children aged 14 to 18 years who had completed 3 or 6 years of treatment with a DF contact lens (MiSight 1 Day; CooperVision, Inc., San Ramon, CA) were recruited and fit bilaterally with the DF and a single-vision (Proclear 1 Day; CooperVision, Inc.) contact lens. Right eye wavefronts were measured using a pyramidal aberrometer (Osiris; CSO, Florence, Italy) while children accommodated binocularly to high-contrast letter stimuli at five target vergences. Wavefront error data were used to compute pupil maps of refractive state.

Results: During near viewing, children wearing single-vision lenses accommodated on average to achieve approximate focus in the pupil center but, because of combined accommodative lag and negative spherical aberration, experienced up to 2.00 D of hyperopic defocus in the pupil margins. With DF lenses, children accommodated similarly achieving approximate focus in the pupil center. When viewing three near distances (0.48, 0.31, and 0.23 m), the added +2.00 D within the DF lens treatment optics shifted the mean defocus from +0.75 to -1.00 D. The DF lens reduced the percentage of hyperopic defocus (≥+0.75 D) in the retinal image from 52 to 25% over these target distances, leading to an increase in myopic defocus (≤-0.50 D) from 17 to 42%.

Conclusions: The DF contact lens did not alter the accommodative behavior of children. The treatment optics introduced myopic defocus and decreased the amount of hyperopically defocused light in the retinal image.

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Contact Lenses* / adverse effects
  • Humans
  • Hyperopia*
  • Myopia* / complications
  • Pupil
  • Refraction, Ocular
  • Vision Tests