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Br J Ophthalmol 2004;88:934-937 doi:10.1136/bjo.2003.033175
  • Clinical science
    • Extended reports

Childhood myopia and parental smoking

  1. S-M Saw1,3,
  2. K-S Chia1,
  3. J M Lindstrom2,
  4. D T H Tan3,
  5. R A Stone4
  1. 1Department of Community, Occupational and Family Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Republic of Singapore
  2. 2Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
  3. 3Singapore Eye Research Institute, Singapore and Department of Ophthalmology, National University of Singapore
  4. 4Department of Ophthalmology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Scheie Eye Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
  1. Correspondence to: Associate Professor S-M Saw Department of Community, Occupational and Family Medicine, National University of Singapore, 16 Medical Drive, Singapore 117597, Republic of Singapore; cofsawsmnus.edu.sg
  • Accepted 1 October 2003

Abstract

Aim: To examine the relation between exposure to passive parental smoke and myopia in Chinese children in Singapore.

Methods: 1334 Chinese children from three schools in Singapore were recruited, all of whom were participants in the Singapore Cohort study Of the Risk factors for Myopia (SCORM).

Information on whether the father or mother smoked, number of years smoked, and the number of cigarettes smoked per day during the child’s lifetime were derived. These data were correlated with contemporaneously obtained data available in SCORM. The children’s cycloplegic autorefraction, corneal curvature radius, and biometry measures were compared with reported parental smoking history.

Results: There were 434 fathers (33.3%) and 23 mothers (1.7%) who smoked during their child’s lifetime. There were no significant trends observed between paternal smoking and refractive error or axial length. After controlling for age, sex, school, mother’s education, and mother’s myopia, children with mothers who had ever smoked during their lifetime had more “positive” refractions (adjusted mean −0.28 D v −1.38 D) compared with children whose mother did not smoke (p = 0.012).

Conclusions: The study found no consistent evidence of association between parental smoking and refractive error. There was a suggestion that children whose mothers smoked cigarettes had more hyperopic refractions, but the absence of a relation with paternal smoking and the small number of mothers who smoked in this sample preclude definite conclusions about a link between passive smoking exposure and myopia.

Footnotes

  • Financial support: Funded by the National Medical Research Council, NMRC/0695/2002, NIH grants NS-11323 (JML) and EY-07354 (RAS), Philip Morris, Inc (JML), the Paul and Evanina Bell Mackall Foundation Trust (RAS), and a Research to Prevent Blindness Physician-Scientist Merit Award (RAS).

  • Disclosure of interest: JML and RAS are co-inventors on a patent application assigned to the University of Pennsylvania dealing with the use of nictonic receptor antagonists as anti-myopia agents. The other authors have no commercial conflicts of interest.

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