| Literature DB >> 22057810 |
Elizabeth Esterberg1, Nisha R Acharya.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This study aims to determine uveitis specialists' practice patterns, preferences, and perceptions of corticosteroid-sparing therapies for the initial treatment of chronic noninfectious uveitis.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22057810 PMCID: PMC3302992 DOI: 10.1007/s12348-011-0047-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Median effectiveness ratingsa of immunomodulatory treatments
| MTX | MMF | AZA | CSA | CTX | INF | ADA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 4 | 4 | 4 | <0.001 |
| Intermediate | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2.5 | 4 | 3 | 3 | <0.001 |
| Posterior/panuveitis | 2 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 3.5 | 3 | <0.001 |
| <0.001 | 0.44 | 0.79 | 0.08 | 0.87 | 0.47 | 0.04 |
|
MTX methotrexate, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, AZA azathioprine, CSA cyclosporine, CTX cyclophosphamide, INF infliximab, ADA adalimumab
aRespondents were asked to rate the effectiveness of each immunomodulatory therapy by anatomic subtype on a four-point scale (1 = not effective, 2 = somewhat effective, 3 = mostly effective, 4 = very effective)
Favorability ratings of immunomodulatory therapies
| MTX | MMF | AZA | CSA | CTX | INF | ADA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Favorablea | |||||||
| Anterior | 28 (62%) | 24 (53%) | 13 (29%) | 9 (20%) | 21 (47%) | 37 (82%) | 33 (73%) |
| Intermediate | 20 (44%) | 27 (60%) | 14 (31%) | 17 (38%) | 24 (53%) | 31 (69%) | 26 (58%) |
| Posterior/panuveitis | 10 (22%) | 24 (53%) | 15 (33%) | 20 (44%) | 32 (71%) | 32 (71%) | 25 (56%) |
| No opinion | |||||||
| Anterior | 0 (0%) | 7 (16%) | 19 (42%) | 16 (36%) | 20 (44%) | 5 (11%) | 10 (22%) |
| Intermediate | 1 (2%) | 4 (9%) | 13 (29%) | 11 (24%) | 17 (38%) | 7 (16%) | 12 (27%) |
| Posterior/panuveitis | 1 (2%) | 2 (4%) | 11 (24%) | 7 (16%) | 9 (20%) | 7 (16%) | 16 (36%) |
MTX methotrexate, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, AZA azathioprine, CSA cyclosporine, CTX cyclophosphamide, INF infliximab, ADA adalimumab
aRating question responses of “mostly effective” or “very effective” were considered favorable. Respondents could also indicate if they had no opinion for a particular combination
Fig. 1Histograms showing proportions of respondents, with 95% onfidence intervals, ranking each treatment as most commonly used or most preferred if cost and availability were not an issue. MTX methotrexate, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, AZA azathioprine, CSA cyclosporine, CTX cyclophosphamide, INF infliximab, ADA adalimumab
Overall rankings by anatomic location of uveitis and corresponding worth estimatesa
| Rank | Anterior | Intermediate | Posterior/pan | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Used | Preferred | Used | Preferred | Used | Preferred | |
| 1 | MTX (0.60) | MTX (0.30) | MTX (0.24) | MMF (0.23) | MMF (0.21) | MMF (0.22) |
| 2 | MMF (0.13) | MMF (0.22) | MMF (0.21) | MTX (0.20) | MTX (0.19) | MTX (0.18) |
| 3 | INF (0.07) | INF (0.14) | AZA (0.13) | INF (0.16) | AZA (0.14) | INF (0.15) |
| 4 | AZA (0.07) | ADA (0.13) | CSA (0.13) | ADA (0.13) | CSA (0.14) | ADA (0.15) |
| 5 | ADA (0.06) | AZA (0.10) | INF (0.13) | AZA (0.12) | INF (0.13) | CSA (0.12) |
| 6 | CSA (0.05) | CSA (0.07) | ADA (0.11) | CSA (0.11) | ADA (0.11) | AZA (0.11) |
| 7 | CTX (0.02) | CTX (0.04) | CTX (0.05) | CTX (0.05) | CTX (0.08) | CTX (0.07) |
MTX methotrexate, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, AZA azathioprine, CSA cyclosporine, CTX cyclophosphamide, INF infliximab, ADA adalimumab
aCalculated using a Bradley–Terry model: represent what fraction of overall worth could be assigned to each treatment and are used to estimate an overall ranking (e.g., based on the collective rankings of the respondents, methotrexate could be assigned 60% of the collective preference as the most used initial treatment for anterior uveitis)
Fig. 2Histogram annotated with percentage of respondents, and 95% confidence intervals, citing each reason for not prescribing specific immunomodulatory therapies. MTX methotrexate, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, AZA azathioprine, CSA cyclosporine, CTX cyclophosphamide, INF infliximab, ADA adalimumab