Outdoor time >120 min/day shows limited myopia protection in premyopic children
This post-hoc analysis, nested within the Shanghai Time Outside to Reduce Myopia (STORM) cluster-randomized trial, investigated the effect of objectively monitored daily time outdoors on myopic shift in premyopic children. The study included 3194 participants aged 6-9 years without myopia who wore smartwatches to monitor time outdoors from 2017 to 2018. All participants underwent cycloplegic refraction. Premyopia was defined as a cycloplegic spherical equivalent (SE) from -0.50 to +0.75 diopters (D). The primary outcome was myopic shift, defined as SE change from baseline to 1-year follow-up. The cohort included 1369 premyopic children, with a mean age of 8.2 ± 0.6 years and 49.5% boys. There was no statistical difference in time outdoors between premyopic and hyperopic children (p=0.303). Results showed hyperopic children had reduced myopic shift with increasing outdoor time, plateauing at approximately 120 minutes per day. In premyopic children, a J-shaped relationship was observed between time outdoors and myopic shift. Compared to the subgroup with daily time outdoors <60 minutes, the difference in SE change was not statistically significant for the 61-90 min/day subgroup (-0.03 D, 95% CI -0.10 to 0.05) or the 91-120 min/day subgroup (-0.03 D, 95% CI -0.11 to 0.05). A reduced myopic shift was only observed with time outdoors >120 minutes per day, but this was also not statistically significant (0.04 D, 95% CI -0.05 to 0.14). The authors conclude that among premyopic children, increased time outdoors has a limited protective effect on myopic shift.