Abstract:Keratoconus is an adolescent-onset blinding eye disease characterized by the protrusion and thinning of the central or paracentral cornea. The cause of keratoconus remains unclear, though its onset and progression arise from a multifactorial interplay involving a polygenic background, environmental exposures, and biomechanical decompensation. Recent studies have demonstrated significant gender differences in the pathogenesis and progression of keratoconus.At the epidemiological level, most studies suggest that the disease shows a male predominance; in terms of clinical features, male patients tend to experience an earlier onset and present with more severe clinical phenotypes, such as more serious corneal morphological deterioration; at the pathological mechanism level, sex hormone expression differences and genetic susceptibility differences play a key role in disease progression; this difference further affects the formulation of clinical prevention and treatment strategies, such as early warning screening for high-risk male groups and individualized corneal cross-linking intervention timing. This article reviews gender differences in keratoconus from the perspectives of epidemiology, clinical characteristics, prevention and treatment, and pathological mechanisms, providing relevant references and insights for future clinical practice.