Efficacy of optometric phototherapy: a systematic review

J Optom. 2023 Oct-Dec;16(4):305-314. doi: 10.1016/j.optom.2023.03.002. Epub 2023 May 23.

Abstract

Purpose: To analyse the scientific evidence about the efficacy of Syntonic phototherapy for producing changes in visual function.

Material and methods: A systematic review was performed to obtain studies on the effects of Syntonic phototherapy on vision. A search in health science databases (Medline, Scopus, Web of Science and PsycINFO) for studies published between 1980 and 2022 was conducted in accordance with the principles of Cochrane approach. The search identified 197 articles. Only clinical studies which used the Syntonic phototherapy as a vision therapy for any visual condition were included. Clinical cases and case series were excluded. Following the inclusion criteria, 8 clinical studies met inclusion, 5 of them being pseudo-experimental studies with an equivalent control group and 3 pre-post pseudo-experimental studies. GRADE tool was used to assess the certainty of the evidence of the studies. The GRADE evidence profile for the studies through the Soft table was made to analyse data.

Results: The studies analysed seven outcomes: visual symptoms, functional visual fields, visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, deviation (phoria/tropia), stereopsis and reading abilities. Finding table about results (Soft Table) showed that for all outcomes reviewed, all studies yielded very low certainty of evidence. Results revealed a lack of scientific evidence of the efficacy of Syntonic optometric phototherapy to produce changes in the visual function.

Conclusion: This systematic review found no consistent evidence for the efficacy of Syntonic phototherapy to cause changes in visual function. There is no scientific evidence to support its clinical use for treating any type of visual anomalies.

Keywords: GRADE tool; Optometric phototherapy; Quality of evidence; Visual anomalies.

Publication types

  • Systematic Review
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Contrast Sensitivity
  • Humans
  • Phototherapy*
  • Vision Disorders
  • Vision, Low*
  • Visual Acuity