Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.

<h4>Purpose</h4>To report the methodology and findings of a large scale investigation of burden and distribution of refractive error, from a contemporary and ethnically diverse study of health and disease in adults, in the UK.<h4>Methods</h4>U K Biobank, a unique contemporary...

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Main Authors: Phillippa M Cumberland, Yanchun Bao, Pirro G Hysi, Paul J Foster, Christopher J Hammond, Jugnoo S Rahi, UK Biobank Eyes & Vision Consortium
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139780
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author Phillippa M Cumberland
Yanchun Bao
Pirro G Hysi
Paul J Foster
Christopher J Hammond
Jugnoo S Rahi
UK Biobank Eyes & Vision Consortium
author_facet Phillippa M Cumberland
Yanchun Bao
Pirro G Hysi
Paul J Foster
Christopher J Hammond
Jugnoo S Rahi
UK Biobank Eyes & Vision Consortium
author_sort Phillippa M Cumberland
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Purpose</h4>To report the methodology and findings of a large scale investigation of burden and distribution of refractive error, from a contemporary and ethnically diverse study of health and disease in adults, in the UK.<h4>Methods</h4>U K Biobank, a unique contemporary resource for the study of health and disease, recruited more than half a million people aged 40-69 years. A subsample of 107,452 subjects undertook an enhanced ophthalmic examination which provided autorefraction data (a measure of refractive error). Refractive error status was categorised using the mean spherical equivalent refraction measure. Information on socio-demographic factors (age, gender, ethnicity, educational qualifications and accommodation tenure) was reported at the time of recruitment by questionnaire and face-to-face interview.<h4>Results</h4>Fifty four percent of participants aged 40-69 years had refractive error. Specifically 27% had myopia (4% high myopia), which was more common amongst younger people, those of higher socio-economic status, higher educational attainment, or of White or Chinese ethnicity. The frequency of hypermetropia increased with age (7% at 40-44 years increasing to 46% at 65-69 years), was higher in women and its severity was associated with ethnicity (moderate or high hypermetropia at least 30% less likely in non-White ethnic groups compared to White).<h4>Conclusions</h4>Refractive error is a significant public health issue for the UK and this study provides contemporary data on adults for planning services, health economic modelling and monitoring of secular trends. Further investigation of risk factors is necessary to inform strategies for prevention. There is scope to do this through the planned longitudinal extension of the UK Biobank study.
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spelling doaj-art-ec2b4587dfdb44138f1a85e11dee5a2f2025-08-20T02:34:13ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011010e013978010.1371/journal.pone.0139780Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.Phillippa M CumberlandYanchun BaoPirro G HysiPaul J FosterChristopher J HammondJugnoo S RahiUK Biobank Eyes & Vision Consortium<h4>Purpose</h4>To report the methodology and findings of a large scale investigation of burden and distribution of refractive error, from a contemporary and ethnically diverse study of health and disease in adults, in the UK.<h4>Methods</h4>U K Biobank, a unique contemporary resource for the study of health and disease, recruited more than half a million people aged 40-69 years. A subsample of 107,452 subjects undertook an enhanced ophthalmic examination which provided autorefraction data (a measure of refractive error). Refractive error status was categorised using the mean spherical equivalent refraction measure. Information on socio-demographic factors (age, gender, ethnicity, educational qualifications and accommodation tenure) was reported at the time of recruitment by questionnaire and face-to-face interview.<h4>Results</h4>Fifty four percent of participants aged 40-69 years had refractive error. Specifically 27% had myopia (4% high myopia), which was more common amongst younger people, those of higher socio-economic status, higher educational attainment, or of White or Chinese ethnicity. The frequency of hypermetropia increased with age (7% at 40-44 years increasing to 46% at 65-69 years), was higher in women and its severity was associated with ethnicity (moderate or high hypermetropia at least 30% less likely in non-White ethnic groups compared to White).<h4>Conclusions</h4>Refractive error is a significant public health issue for the UK and this study provides contemporary data on adults for planning services, health economic modelling and monitoring of secular trends. Further investigation of risk factors is necessary to inform strategies for prevention. There is scope to do this through the planned longitudinal extension of the UK Biobank study.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139780
spellingShingle Phillippa M Cumberland
Yanchun Bao
Pirro G Hysi
Paul J Foster
Christopher J Hammond
Jugnoo S Rahi
UK Biobank Eyes & Vision Consortium
Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.
PLoS ONE
title Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.
title_full Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.
title_fullStr Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.
title_full_unstemmed Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.
title_short Frequency and Distribution of Refractive Error in Adult Life: Methodology and Findings of the UK Biobank Study.
title_sort frequency and distribution of refractive error in adult life methodology and findings of the uk biobank study
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139780
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