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Myopia and high myopia trends in Chinese children and adolescents over 25 years: a nationwide study with projections to 2050

Zhe Pan, Haolan Xian, Feng Li, Ziyao Wang, Zihan Li, Yu Huang, Wenqing Liu, Yixuan Li, Fan Li, Jinyuan Wang, Haichao Chen, Yi-Lan Wu, Yueyuan Xu, Gangyue Wu, Yang Zhang, Lvfu He, Jianping Zhang, Fangxia Zhang, Xuehan Qian, Xiuhong Zhang, Lianhong Zhou, Yanqing Feng, Li Li, Xiangui He, Xun Xu, Jin Yang, Xiyuan Zhou, Dan Zhu, Chen‐Wei Pan, Marcus Ang, Seang‐Mei Saw, Yingfeng Zheng, Mingguang He, Jost B. Jonas, Neil M. Bressler, Ching-Yu Cheng, Yih Chung Tham, Chun Zhang, Ya Xing Wang, Tien Yin Wong

2025The Lancet Regional Health - Western Pacific16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: The global rise in myopia, particularly in Asia, presents significant public health challenges. Analyzing trends and forecasting impacts are critical for developing strategies to mitigate this burden. Methods: We conducted the largest study to date on myopia and high myopia prevalence in Chinese children and adolescents aged 7-18 years, analyzing data from 5,095,256 individuals across 119 studies from 1998 to 2022. Data variability between cycloplegia and non-cycloplegia measurements was addressed using a distance-based model averaging calibration. Aggregated prevalence and age-specific urban-rural trends were estimated using thin plate spline regression, with projections to 2050 derived from time series modeling. Findings: Myopia prevalence plateaued in 2006 in urban areas and in 2013 in rural areas, with the urban-rural prevalence gap narrowing since 2015 (urban/rural ratio below 1.3 for all ages). By 2050, myopia prevalence is projected to stabilize at 27.1% (95% CI: 10.0-44.4%) for ages 7-9 and 81.5% (74.7-88.3%) for ages 16-18 in urban areas, and at 20.1% (8.6-31.7%) and 74.1% (63.2-84.8%), respectively, in rural areas. High myopia prevalence among adolescents aged 16-18 is expected to rise from 7.3% in 2001 to 22.1% by 2050. Prevalence correlated significantly with the Human Development Index (P < 0.001). Interpretation: Despite stabilization in overall myopia prevalence, the continued rise in high myopia underscores the need for targeted control measures. Projections emphasize the importance of addressing regional disparities and prioritizing public health interventions. Funding: National Natural Science Foundation of China (#82271086; #82388101; #72495123).

Topics & Concepts

OptometryMedicinePediatricsGeographyOphthalmology and Visual Impairment StudiesSpaceflight effects on biologyRetinopathy of Prematurity Studies
Myopia and high myopia trends in Chinese children and adolescents over 25 years: a nationwide study with projections to 2050 | Litcius