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Extended optical treatment versus early patching with an intensive patching regimen in children with amblyopia in Europe (EuPatch): a multicentre, randomised controlled trial

Extended optical treatment versus early patching with an intensive patching regimen in children with amblyopia in Europe (EuPatch): a multicentre, randomised controlled trial
Extended optical treatment versus early patching with an intensive patching regimen in children with amblyopia in Europe (EuPatch): a multicentre, randomised controlled trial

Background: Amblyopia, the most common visual impairment of childhood, is a public health concern. An extended period of optical treatment before patching is recommended by the clinical guidelines of several countries. The aim of this study was to compare an intensive patching regimen, with and without extended optical treatment (EOT), in a randomised controlled trial. Methods: EuPatch was a randomised controlled trial conducted in 30 hospitals in the UK, Greece, Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Children aged 3–8 years with newly detected, untreated amblyopia (defined as an interocular difference ≥0·30 logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution [logMAR] best corrected visual acuity [BCVA]) due to anisometropia, strabismus, or both were eligible. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) via a computer-generated sequence to either the EOT group (18 weeks of glasses use before patching) or to the early patching group (3 weeks of glasses use before patching), stratified for type and severity of amblyopia. All participants were initially prescribed an intensive patching regimen (10 h/day, 6 days per week), supplemented with motivational materials. The patching period was up to 24 weeks. Participants, parents or guardians, assessors, and the trial statistician were not masked to treatment allocation. The primary outcome was successful treatment (ie, ≤0·20 logMAR interocular difference in BCVA) after 12 weeks of patching. Two primary analyses were conducted: the main analysis included all participants, including those who dropped out, but excluded those who did not provide outcome data at week 12 and remained on the study; the other analysis imputed this missing data. All eligible and randomly assigned participants were assessed for adverse events. This study is registered with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number registry (ISRCTN51712593) and is no longer recruiting. Findings: Between June 20, 2013, and March 12, 2020, after exclusion of eight participants found ineligible after detailed screening, we randomly assigned 334 participants (170 to the EOT group and 164 to the early patching group), including 188 (56%) boys, 146 (44%) girls, and two (1%) participants whose sex was not recorded. 317 participants (158 in the EOT group and 159 in the early patching group) were analysed for the primary outcome without imputation of missing data (median follow-up time 42 weeks [IQR 42] in the EOT group vs 27 weeks [27] in the early patching group). 24 (14%) of 170 participants in the EOT group and ten (6%) of 164 in the early patching group were excluded or dropped out of the study, mostly due to loss to follow-up and withdrawal of consent; ten (6%) in the EOT group and three (2%) in the early patching group missed the 12 week visit but remained on the study. A higher proportion of participants in the early patching group had successful treatment (107 [67%] of 159) than those in the EOT group (86 [54%] of 158; 13% difference; p=0·019) after 12 weeks of patching. No serious adverse events related to the interventions occurred. Interpretation: The results from this trial indicate that early patching is more effective than EOT for the treatment of most children with amblyopia. Our findings also provide data for the personalisation of amblyopia treatments. Funding: Action Medical Research, NIHR Clinical Research Network, and Ulverscroft Foundation.

0140-6736
1766-1778
Proudlock, Frank A.
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Hisaund, Michael
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Maconachie, Gail
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et al.
on behalf of the EUPatch Study Group
Proudlock, Frank A.
8723b327-c834-4884-a343-f2821a17eedb
Hisaund, Michael
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Maconachie, Gail
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Papageorgiou, Eleni
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Manouchehrinia, Ali
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Dahlmann-Noor, Annegret
3155d251-0011-4e0e-b84d-d3ad54eae7b9
Khandelwal, Payal
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Self, Jay
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Beisse, Christina
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Gottlob, Irene
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Mellors, Ashleigh
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Mallory, Lucy
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Teli, Seema
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Sheth, Viral
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Langmann, Andrea
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Bruce, Alison
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Smith, Angie
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Powell, Christine
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Cross, Meriel
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North, Lorraine
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Abbott, Joseph
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Mohan, Meyyammai
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Kafil-Hussain, Namir
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Joseph, Annie
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Webb, Hilary
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Redmill, Brian
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Lawler, Carly
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Sturm, Veit
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Purohit, Ravi
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Gupta, Mohit
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Mataftsi, Asimina
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Osborne, Daniel
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Crofts, Catherine
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Patel, Selina
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Proudlock, Frank A., Hisaund, Michael and Maconachie, Gail , et al. and on behalf of the EUPatch Study Group (2024) Extended optical treatment versus early patching with an intensive patching regimen in children with amblyopia in Europe (EuPatch): a multicentre, randomised controlled trial. The Lancet, 403 (10438), 1766-1778. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(23)02893-3).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Amblyopia, the most common visual impairment of childhood, is a public health concern. An extended period of optical treatment before patching is recommended by the clinical guidelines of several countries. The aim of this study was to compare an intensive patching regimen, with and without extended optical treatment (EOT), in a randomised controlled trial. Methods: EuPatch was a randomised controlled trial conducted in 30 hospitals in the UK, Greece, Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Children aged 3–8 years with newly detected, untreated amblyopia (defined as an interocular difference ≥0·30 logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution [logMAR] best corrected visual acuity [BCVA]) due to anisometropia, strabismus, or both were eligible. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) via a computer-generated sequence to either the EOT group (18 weeks of glasses use before patching) or to the early patching group (3 weeks of glasses use before patching), stratified for type and severity of amblyopia. All participants were initially prescribed an intensive patching regimen (10 h/day, 6 days per week), supplemented with motivational materials. The patching period was up to 24 weeks. Participants, parents or guardians, assessors, and the trial statistician were not masked to treatment allocation. The primary outcome was successful treatment (ie, ≤0·20 logMAR interocular difference in BCVA) after 12 weeks of patching. Two primary analyses were conducted: the main analysis included all participants, including those who dropped out, but excluded those who did not provide outcome data at week 12 and remained on the study; the other analysis imputed this missing data. All eligible and randomly assigned participants were assessed for adverse events. This study is registered with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number registry (ISRCTN51712593) and is no longer recruiting. Findings: Between June 20, 2013, and March 12, 2020, after exclusion of eight participants found ineligible after detailed screening, we randomly assigned 334 participants (170 to the EOT group and 164 to the early patching group), including 188 (56%) boys, 146 (44%) girls, and two (1%) participants whose sex was not recorded. 317 participants (158 in the EOT group and 159 in the early patching group) were analysed for the primary outcome without imputation of missing data (median follow-up time 42 weeks [IQR 42] in the EOT group vs 27 weeks [27] in the early patching group). 24 (14%) of 170 participants in the EOT group and ten (6%) of 164 in the early patching group were excluded or dropped out of the study, mostly due to loss to follow-up and withdrawal of consent; ten (6%) in the EOT group and three (2%) in the early patching group missed the 12 week visit but remained on the study. A higher proportion of participants in the early patching group had successful treatment (107 [67%] of 159) than those in the EOT group (86 [54%] of 158; 13% difference; p=0·019) after 12 weeks of patching. No serious adverse events related to the interventions occurred. Interpretation: The results from this trial indicate that early patching is more effective than EOT for the treatment of most children with amblyopia. Our findings also provide data for the personalisation of amblyopia treatments. Funding: Action Medical Research, NIHR Clinical Research Network, and Ulverscroft Foundation.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 2 May 2024
Published date: 2 May 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490096
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490096
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: 42da7716-e6ab-4d1f-a6f5-c919684c3a1c
ORCID for Jay Self: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1030-9963

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Date deposited: 14 May 2024 16:49
Last modified: 16 Aug 2024 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Frank A. Proudlock
Author: Michael Hisaund
Author: Gail Maconachie
Author: Eleni Papageorgiou
Author: Ali Manouchehrinia
Author: Annegret Dahlmann-Noor
Author: Payal Khandelwal
Author: Jay Self ORCID iD
Author: Christina Beisse
Author: Irene Gottlob
Author: Ashleigh Mellors
Author: Lucy Mallory
Author: Seema Teli
Author: Viral Sheth
Author: Andrea Langmann
Author: Alison Bruce
Author: Angie Smith
Author: Christine Powell
Author: Meriel Cross
Author: Lorraine North
Author: Joseph Abbott
Author: Meyyammai Mohan
Author: Namir Kafil-Hussain
Author: Annie Joseph
Author: Hilary Webb
Author: Brian Redmill
Author: Carly Lawler
Author: Veit Sturm
Author: Ravi Purohit
Author: Mohit Gupta
Author: Sue Elliott
Author: Asimina Mataftsi
Author: Samer Hamada
Author: Megan Evans
Author: Simone Hatebur
Author: Shazia Hussain
Author: Julie Orr
Author: Shegufta Farooq
Author: Daniel Osborne
Author: Farzana Begum
Author: Catherine Crofts
Author: Franziska Pausch
Author: Heike Gaugl
Author: Jennifer Haug
Author: Ruth Jones
Author: Karin Steinmair
Author: Tina Sharma
Author: Stephanie Hillier
Author: Michelle Dent
Author: Selina Patel
Corporate Author: et al.
Corporate Author: on behalf of the EUPatch Study Group

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