Background: A prospective analysis of the incidence of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) by documenting clinical perinatal characteristics of affected infants, in an attempt to describe risk factors for ROP.
Materials and methods: Between March 2002 and April 2004, 161 infants, with a gestational age under 31 weeks and/or a birth weight under 1500 g, were screened according to CRYO-ROP guidelines, using direct ophthalmoscopy with a Layden contact lens. Risk factors for ROP were analyzed with the Student and Fischer tests.
Results: ROP developed in 15% of the cases studied, with one out of five at prethreshold or threshold levels of ROP. Gestational age at birth (p<0.0001), low birth weight (p<0.0001), the length of the infant's stay in the neonatal intensive care unit (p<0.0001), the duration of mechanical ventilation (p<0.0001), the duration of oxygen provided (p<0.0001), blood transfusions (p<0.0001), hyaline membrane disease (p=0.0257), and bronchodysplasia (p=0.0012) were significant risk factors for ROP.
Conclusion: Despite progress in neonatal intensive care, ROP persists and can be explained by greater and greater prematurity and earlier screening. Effective screening, done between 4 and 6 weeks of life, taking risk factors into account, can improve prognosis.