DIMS Lenses May Slow Myopia Progression - Summary - MDSpire

DIMS Lenses May Slow Myopia Progression

  • By

  • Andrea Surnit

  • July 8, 2026

  • 4 min

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Objective:

To evaluate the long-term effects of Defocus Incorporated Multiple Segments (DIMS) spectacle lenses on axial elongation and refractive error in pediatric patients.

Approach:
  • Study Design: Observational posttrial follow-up of participants from an original clinical trial comparing DIMS lenses with single-vision lenses.
  • Participants: 60 patients aged 8 to 13 years at baseline, followed for a mean of 9.4 years.
  • Analysis: Longitudinal changes in axial length and spherical equivalent refraction (SER) were analyzed using linear mixed-effects models.
Key Findings:
  • DIMS wear was associated with a 65% reduction in axial elongation compared to single-vision wear.
  • Cumulative axial elongation predicted for continuous DIMS wearers was 0.44 mm versus 1.27 mm for single-vision wearers.
  • The treatment effect was greatest in younger patients, particularly before age 18.
  • Cumulative myopia progression was less definitive, with predictions of -0.57 diopters for DIMS wear versus -2.17 diopters for single-vision wear.
Interpretation:

The study indicates that DIMS spectacle lenses may provide durable long-term control of axial elongation through late adolescence, although findings for refractive error were less consistent.

Limitations:
  • Lack of a contemporaneous untreated or continuous single-vision control group.
  • Attrition over nearly a decade may have introduced survivor bias.
  • Variable follow-up intervals required statistical modeling rather than direct comparisons.
Conclusion:

Further studies with appropriate long-term control groups are needed to understand the differences between axial length control and refractive error outcomes.

Sources:

Original Source(s)

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