Of those, nearly 820,000 have a degenerative form of the disease and more than 41,000 suffer a complication called myopic choroidal neovascularisation that could cause long-term vision loss, with women at higher risk, researchers said.
This is the first large-scale study ever done to calculate the real-world prevalence of myopic choroidal neovascularisation in the US, they said.
Myopia has become increasingly common over the past several decades. In the US, the number of nearsighted people rose from about 25 per cent in the early 1970s to 40 per cent around the turn of millennium.
Progressive high myopia, also called pathologic myopia, is a degenerative form of the disease. It can cause atrophy of the retina that lines the back of the eye. People with high myopia and the degenerative form are at higher risk of myopic choroidal neovascularisation.
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The study conducted by researchers from the American Academy of Ophthalmology, Genentech, the National Institutes of Health and University of California, Davis found that nearly 4 per cent of adults in the US have high myopia. That is equivalent to 9.6 million people.
The prevalence of myopic choroidal neovascularisation is 0.017 per cent. While the disease appears rare, it affects 41,111 people in the US.
Women appear to be at greater risk for complications of high myopia, researchers said.
The prevalence rate for progressive high myopia was 0.42 per cent in women compared to 0.25 per cent in men. An estimated 527,000 women have the condition compared to 292,000 men. Similarly, for myopic choroidal neovascularisation, the prevalence rate for women is double that of men.
"Prior to this study, we really had no idea how many people had myopic choroidal neovascularisation, which can be devastating," said lead author Jeffrey Willis, a retina fellow at the UC Davis Eye Centre.
The findings were published in the journal Ophthalmology.