Myopia

Myopia, or nearsightedness, affects about 3 billion people worldwide. While glasses easily correct vision, severe myopia (affecting 1 in 5 nearsighted people) can lead to serious complications later in life, including macular degeneration, glaucoma, and retinal detachment. IOB is developing innovative approaches to slow myopia progression and prevent these complications.

Some individuals develop severe myopia that continues to worsen beyond childhood. When corrective lenses of minus 6 diopters or more are needed, this is called high myopia. High myopia, or severe nearsightedness, occurs when the eyeball grows too long, causing light to focus in front of the retina rather than directly on it, which results in blurry distance vision. 

Individuals with high myopia face a significantly increased risk of serious eye conditions including macular degeneration, glaucoma, and retinal detachment. Because myopia is so widespread and these complications can lead to blindness, experts predict that myopia will become the leading cause of blindness in the coming decades.

While glasses and contact lenses can correct vision in people with high myopia, they do not reduce the risk of these sight-threatening complications. IOB scientists are working to uncover the molecular mechanisms that drive myopia development and to use this knowledge to develop therapies that prevent its blinding complications.

IOB researchers have identified some of the visual cues that cause the development of myopia and are also dissecting the molecular signaling that is responsible for myopia progression, which may lead to the development of therapies to prevent vision loss in patients with high myopia.

Publications

Key lines of discovery in myopia research

Ophthalmic Physiol Opt., 2025
Frank Schaeffel, Jeremy A Guggenheim, Richard A Stone, Christine F Wildsoet

Mechanisms of emmetropization and what might go wrong in myopia

Vision Res., 2024
Frank Schaeffel, Barbara Swiatczak

Toward Retinal Organoids in High-Throughput

Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med., 2024
Stefan Erich Spirig, Magdalena Renner

Get Involved

There are many opportunities to get involved. Help us restore vision.