ABSTRACT. Objective. Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a potentially avoidable cause of blindness in children. The proportion of blindness as a result of ROP varies greatly among countries depending on their level of development, being influenced by the availability of neonatal care, neonatal outcomes, and whether effective screening and treatment programs are in place. The objective of this study was to compare characteristics of premature infants who developed severe ROP between 1996 and 2002 in highly developed countries with less developed countries.Methods. This was an observational study. A questionnaire was completed by ophthalmologists in countries with low, moderate, and high development rankings (3 highly developed countries and from 10 less welldeveloped countries) who screen for ROP in which they supplied birth weights and gestational ages (GAs) of infants who were treated for threshold ROP or identified with more advanced stages of the disease. Birth weights and GAs of infants with severe ROP were measured.Results. The mean birth weights of infants from highly developed countries ranged from 737 to 763 g compared with values ranging from 903 to 1527 g in less developed countries. Mean GAs of infants from highly developed countries ranged from 25.3 to 25.6 weeks compared with 26.3 to 33.5 weeks in less developed countries. A total of 13.0% of 1091 infants from poorly developed countries exceeded United Kingdom screening criteria; 3.6% exceeded a criteria of <34 weeks' GA and/or <1750 g birth weight.Conclusions. These findings suggest that larger, more mature infants are developing severe ROP in countries with low/moderate levels of development compared with highly developed countries. ROP screening programs need to use criteria that are appropriate for their local population. Pediatrics 2005;115:e518-e525. URL: www.
pediatrics.org/cgi
Background: Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a common cause of blindness in countries with rapidly developing systems of neonatal care. At present, detection and treatment programs are not widely available in many regions of middle- and low-income countries.
Subject population: Case series.
Methods: An analysis was undertaken to determine in which neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) in Peru babies blind from ROP had been cared for. Demographic and hospital information was gathered for children blind from ROP presenting before the age of 5 years. NICUs with a high likelihood of having ROP-blind children were offered training and equipment designed to improve neonatal care.
Results: Ninety-one children with ROP blindness were identified. Twenty-six percent were <1000 g at birth, and 17% had birth weights of >1500 g. Forty-six percent came from NICUs in Lima. Interventional workshops emphasizing neonatal care and oxygen administration have been conducted thus far in six of the 13 largest NICUs in Lima. The percentage of at-risk babies being examined has generally increased, whereas the percentage of babies requiring treatment decreased in three NICUs and increased slightly in two, and no preworkshop data were available in one.
Conclusion: This report represents the initial results of an evidence-based approach to decreasing blindness from ROP in Peru. Workshops emphasizing neonatal care, especially targeting oxygen administration, provide methods for improving care of at-risk babies.
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