Litcius/Paper detail

Retinopathy of Prematurity in the 21st Century and the Complex Impact of Supplemental Oxygen

Sarah Hilkert Rodriguez, Anna L. Ells, Michael P. Blair, Parag K. Shah, C. Armitage Harper, María Ana Martinez-Castellanos, S. Grace Prakalapakorn, Erima Denis, Rebecca Claire Lusobya, Mark J. Greenwald, Sherwin J. Isenberg, Scott R. Lambert, Yvonne E. Vaucher, Ann Carroll, Lucy Namakula

2023Journal of Clinical Medicine20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a leading cause of childhood blindness. Not only do the epidemiologic determinants and distributions of patients with ROP vary worldwide, but clinical differences have also been described. The Third Edition of the International Classification of ROP (ICROP3) acknowledges that aggressive ROP (AROP) can occur in larger preterm infants and involve areas of the more anterior retina, particularly in low-resource settings with unmonitored oxygen supplementation. As sub-specialty training programs are underway to address an epidemic of ROP in sub-Saharan Africa, recognizing characteristic retinal pathology in preterm infants exposed to unmonitored supplemental oxygen is important to proper diagnosis and treatment. This paper describes specific features associated with various ROP presentations: oxygen-induced retinopathy in animal models, traditional ROP seen in high-income countries with modern oxygen management, and ROP related to excessive oxygen supplementation in low- and middle-income countries: oxygen-associated ROP (OA-ROP).

Topics & Concepts

Retinopathy of prematurityMedicineChildhood blindnessSupplemental oxygenBlindnessPediatricsRetinopathyIntensive care medicineOphthalmologyGestational ageOptometryAnesthesiaPregnancyEndocrinologyBiologyGeneticsDiabetes mellitusRetinopathy of Prematurity StudiesNeonatal Respiratory Health ResearchNeonatal and fetal brain pathology