RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To report long-term ophthalmological sequelae in extremely premature infants at 5 years and to determine the relationship between neonatal variables (including retinopathy of prematurity; ROP) and the 5 year ophthalmological outcome of these infants. METHODOLOGY: The study cohort comprised 84 surviving infants born with a birthweight < 1000 g or gestational age < 28 weeks from June 1985 to December 1989. All infants had an ophthalmological assessment between 34 and 40 weeks post conceptional age to document grade of ROP and were assessed at 5 years of age for fundoscopy, visual acuity, refractive error and ocular mobility. RESULTS: Of the 84 long-term survivors 69 (82%) were formally assessed at 5 years. Overall, 30 (43%) had some form of ocular disorder. Nineteen (27%) had reduced visual acuity of < 6/6 and three of these were blind. Myopia > -0.5 dioptre was noted in eight (12%), hypermetropia > or = 2.0 dioptre in five (8%), astigmatism in seven (11%) and strabismus was present in nine (14%) of the cohort. There was a significant relationship (P < 0.0001) between the incidence of ocular disorders and ROP. However, even those premature children without ROP had a 31% incidence of ocular disorder at 5 years. CONCLUSION: Long-term ophthalmological follow-up is recommended in all extremely premature infants regardless of the presence of ROP in the neonatal period.