Purpose To compare the refractive outcome and residual accommodation with respect to various degrees of iris and skin pigmentation in hypermetropic children using 2 drops of cyclopentolate 1% (C +... Show morePurpose To compare the refractive outcome and residual accommodation with respect to various degrees of iris and skin pigmentation in hypermetropic children using 2 drops of cyclopentolate 1% (C + C) or 1 drop of cyclopentolate 1% and 1 drop of tropicamide 1% (C + T). Methods Two hundred fifty-one hypermetropic children were classified according to iris and skin pigmentation (light, medium, dark) and received randomized and double-blind C + C or C + T. Refractive error (spherical equivalent, SEQ) was determined using the Retinomax-K + 3. In 204 subjects, residual accommodation (RA) was determined using the PlusoptiX PowerRefractor. Results A linear mixed model with a light-irided and light skin-pigmented reference group receiving C + T (mean SEQ +3.10 +/- 1.87D) indicated significant less hypermetropia in subjects with a dark iris having a medium- and dark-pigmented skin in C + T, -1.02 +/- 0.29 (-1.59/-0.45) and -1.53 +/- 0.30 (-2.10/-0.95); and in subjects having a light-, medium- and dark-pigmented skin in C + C, -0.74 +/- 0.34 (-1.41/-0.06), -1.26 +/- 0.30 (-1.85/-0.66) and -1.84 +/- 0.30 (-2.42/-1.26). Similar findings were present for RA. Our model with a light-irided and light skin-pigmented reference group receiving C + T (mean RA +0.84 +/- 0.61D) indicated significantly higher RA in dark-irided subjects with medium- and dark-pigmented skin in C + T, +1.05 +/- 0.19 (+0.67/+1.43) and +1.35 +/- 0.20 (+0.9/+1.74), and in C + C, +1.13 +/- 0.21 (+0.71/+1.55) and +1.90 +/- 0.19 (+1.51/+2.28). Conclusions We found solid evidence that skin pigmentation rather than iris pigmentation is the decisive factor for effectiveness of cycloplegics. Awareness of the limitations of cycloplegic regimens in dark-irided/pigmented children is needed. Our study showed that cyclopentolate 1% combined with tropicamide 1% provides more accurate refractive outcomes both statistically and clinically integrating the factor skin pigmentation for dark-irided subjects. Show less