Understanding the Impact of Residual Amblyopia on Functional Vision and Eye-related Quality of Life Using the PedEyeQ

Sarah R. Hatt, David A. Leske, Yolanda S. Castañeda, Suzanne M. Wernimont, Laura Liebermann, Christina S. Cheng-Patel, Eileen E. Birch, Jonathan M. Holmes

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the effect of residual amblyopia on functional vision and eye-related quality of life (ER-QOL) in children and their families using the Pediatric Eye Questionnaire (PedEyeQ). Design: Prospective cross-sectional study. Methods: Seventeen children with residual amblyopia (no current treatment except glasses), 48 visually normal controls without glasses, and 19 controls wearing glasses (aged 8-11 years) completed the Child 5-11 year PedEyeQ. One parent for each child completed the Proxy 5-11 PedEyeQ, Parent PedEyeQ. Rasch-calibrated domain scores were calculated for each questionnaire domain and compared between amblyopic children and controls. Results: PedEyeQ scores were significantly lower (worse) for children with residual amblyopia than for controls without glasses across all domains: Child PedEyeQ greatest mean difference 18 points worse on Functional vision domain (95% confidence interval [CI] −29 to −7; P < .001); Proxy PedEyeQ greatest mean difference 31 points worse on Functional vision domain (95% CI −39 to −24; P < .001); Parent PedEyeQ greatest mean difference 34 points worse on the Worry about child's eye condition domain (95% CI −46 to −22; P < .001). Compared with controls wearing glasses, PedEyeQ scores were lower for residual amblyopia on the Child Frustration/worry domain (P = .03), on 4 of 5 Proxy domains (P ≤ .05), and on 3 of 4 Parent domains (P ≤ .05). Conclusions: Residual amblyopia affects functional vision and ER-QOL in children. Parents of amblyopic children also experience lower quality of life. These data help broaden our understanding of the everyday-life impact of childhood residual amblyopia.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)173-181
Number of pages9
JournalAmerican journal of ophthalmology
Volume218
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2020

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ophthalmology

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