Abstract

Research often attempts to identify risk factors associated with prevalent disease or that change the probability of developing disease. These factors may also help in predicting which individuals may go on to develop the condition of interest. However, risk factors may not always serve as the best predictive factors and not all predictive factors should be considered as risk factors. A child’s current refractive error, parental history of myopia, and the amount of time children spend outdoors are excellent examples. Parental myopia and time outdoors are meaningful risk factors because they alter the probability of developing myopia and point to important hereditary and environmental influences. A child’s current refractive error points to no particular mechanism and is therefore a poor risk factor. However, it serves as an excellent predictive factor for identifying children likely to develop future myopia. Risk factors may explain how a child reached a particular level of refractive error, but knowledge of that history may not be needed in order to make an accurate prediction about future refractive error. Current refractive error alone may be sufficient. This difference between risk factors and predictive factors is not always appreciated in the literature, including a recent publication in BMC Ophthalmology. This letter attempts to make that distinction and to explain why parental myopia and time outdoors are significant risk factors in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error, yet are not significant for predicting future myopia in a multivariate model that contains current refractive error.

Highlights

  • Research often attempts to identify risk factors associated with prevalent disease or that change the probability of developing disease

  • We wish to point out an error we believe was made by Grzybowski and co-workers in their January 2020 paper in BMC Ophthalmology, “A review on the epidemiology of myopia in school children worldwide” [1]

  • One of their citations was from our National Institutes of Health-funded, US-based Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study: “Prediction of Juvenile-Onset Myopia” by Zadnik et al in the June 2015 issue of JAMA Ophthalmology [2]

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Summary

Introduction

Research often attempts to identify risk factors associated with prevalent disease or that change the probability of developing disease. One of their citations was from our National Institutes of Health-funded, US-based Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study: “Prediction of Juvenile-Onset Myopia” by Zadnik et al in the June 2015 issue of JAMA Ophthalmology [2]. Associated with myopia onset, while having myopic parents, near work and time outdoors were not.”

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