Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02458846

Efficacy of Visual Screening in Ontario

The Efficacy of a Visual Screening Program to Reduce Later Amblyopia and Untreated Refractive Errors

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,597 (actual)
Sponsor
The Hospital for Sick Children · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
3 Years – 8 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Amblyopia (lazy eye), is the leading treatable cause of vision loss in childhood. Uncorrected refractive errors (ie farsightedness) can lead to difficulties in school. Unfortunately, many children do not receive vision screening until they have already developed irreversible vision problems. We will conduct a cluster randomized clinical trial in which schools, not individual children, are randomly allocated to receive a kindergarten visual screening program or to receive no intervention by the research team (i.e., "care as usual"). We will compare the prevalence of visual problems (and proportion of children with reading problems) when the children are in Grade 2, after allowing for at least one year of treatment.

Detailed description

The proposed study is a single-masked cluster randomized clinical trial, with randomization and analyses occurring at the level of "schools" (i.e., we are not randomly assigning individuals to groups). To assess the efficacy of a visual screening program, we will compare visual outcomes in 25 schools randomly chosen to receive the program and 25 schools allocated to "care as usual" one year after screening. The screening tools are HOTV crowded acuity, Preschool Randot Stereoacuity Test, and Plusoptix Autorefractor. The outcome measures will assess later differences between schools receiving the visual screening program and control schools for prevalence of (1) visual and (2) reading problems. A lower prevalence of either or both problems in schools where the visual screening program was offered would provide evidence for the efficacy of vision screening. Primary outcome measure is the prevalence of amblyopia, reduced stereo vision, and untreated clinically significant refractive errors in "screened" versus "care as usual" schools. Secondary outcome measure is the proportion of children performing 1 standard deviation below average on reading scores in "screened" versus "care as usual" schools.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCrowded HOTV Acuity TestThis is one of the most sensitive tests of acuity for vision screening of young children. The child is asked to recognize a letter (H,O,T,V) that is surrounded by bars to induce the crowding effects typical of amblyopia. Children were tested monocularly and was required to achieve at least 20/32 in each eye to pass. Children already wearing glasses were tested with their glasses on.
OTHERPreschool Randot Stereoacuity TestThis is a reliable screening test for stereo depth perception for young children. Children wear polarized stereoglasses and are asked to identify or match shapes that are "hiding in the snow", which cannot be perceived if the child has abnormal binocular vision. Children were required to achieve at least 60 arcseconds of disparity to pass. Children already wearing glasses were tested with their glasses worn under the stereo glasses.
DEVICEPlusoptix AutorefractorAutorefractors are electronic devices that measure refractive errors by focusing a light onto the child's eyes and recording how their reflections from the retina return to the camera. The Plusoptix has been shown to have high sensitivity and specificity in previous research. AAPOS (2013) guidelines were used to determine the referral criteria.
OTHERComprehensive Eye ExamChildren who did not pass all three screening tests were referred for full cycloplegic optometry exams, with a parent/guardian present. Optometrists assessed visual history, monocular visual acuity (near \& far), strabismus, binocular function, abnormalities of the anterior segment, and cycloplegic refraction. If the optometrist prescribed glasses, frames were chosen at the time of the exam and the glasses were dispensed either at school (with an optician) or at the optometrist's office.

Timeline

Start date
2014-09-01
Primary completion
2019-12-15
Completion
2019-12-15
First posted
2015-06-01
Last updated
2020-03-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02458846. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.