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Cataract Extraction Rates Among Chinese, Malays, and Indians in Singapore
A Population-Based Analysis
Arch Ophthalmol. 2001;119:727-732.
Objective To describe the rates of cataract extraction among Chinese, Malays,
and Indians in an urban population in Asia.
Design Population-based incidence study using data from a medical savings fund.
Study Population Chinese, Malay, and Indian residents in Singapore.
Methods Data on all cataract operations performed for "senile cataract" (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical
Modification code 366.1) between 1991 and 1996 were retrieved from
Medisave, a population-wide, government-administered medical savings fund.
The Singapore census was used as a denominator to allow an estimation of age,
sex, and race-specific annual rates of cataract surgery.
Results Between 1991 and 1996, 61 210 cataract operations for "senile cataract"
were performed on Singapore residents, which is equivalent to an average rate
of 356.4 cataract operations per 100 000 persons per year (95% confidence
interval [CI], 353.6-359.2). The average rate was highest for Indians (age-sex
adjusted rate of 396.5 per 100 000/year), followed by Chinese (371.2
per 100 000/year), and lowest for Malays (237.2 per 100 000/year).
Women had higher rates of cataract extraction than men (age-adjusted relative
risk, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.11-1.17), with this pattern consistent across the 3
racial groups. The rate of cataract extraction increased by an average of
40 operations per 100 000/year (95% CI, 28.6-52.8) between 1991 and 1996.
Overall, the proportion of cataract extraction without concurrent intraocular
lens implantation was low (n = 762, 1.2%), but rates still decreased by an
average of 0.8 per 100 000 per year (95% CI, 0.03-1.5) during the 6 years.
Conclusions The rate of cataract extraction in Singapore is consistent with rates
seen in developed countries in the West. Racial variation in rates suggests
varying predisposition to cataract development and/or threshold for cataract
surgery between Chinese, Malay, and Indian populations in Singapore.
Tien Yin Wong, FRCS(Ed), MPH
From the Singapore National Eye Center, Singapore Eye Research Institute
and National University of Singapore, Singapore; the Department of Ophthalmology
and Visual Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and the Department
of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.
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