| Literature DB >> 24734166 |
Abstract
Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease (VKH) and sympathetic ophthalmia (SO) are types of T-cell mediated autoimmune granulomatous uveitis. Although the two diseases share common clinical features, they have certain differences in gender predilections. VKH classically has been reported as more prevalent in females than males, yet some studies in Japan and China have not found differences in gender prevalence. Male patients have a higher risk of chorioretinal degeneration, vitiligo, and worse prognosis. Conversely, the changing levels of estrogen/progesterone during pregnancy and the menstrual cycle as well as higher levels of TGF-β show a protective role in females. Potential causes of female predilection for VKH are associated with HLA-DR and HLA-DQ alleles. SO, a bilateral granulomatous uveitis, occurs in the context of one eye after a penetrating injury due to trauma or surgery. In contrast to the female dominance in VKH, males are more frequently affected by SO due to a higher incidence of ocular injury, especially during wartime. However, no gender predilection of SO has been reported in postsurgical cases. No clinically different manifestations are revealed between males and females in SO secondary to either ocular trauma or surgery. The potential causes of the gender difference may provide hints on future treatment and disease evaluation.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24734166 PMCID: PMC3964687 DOI: 10.1155/2014/157803
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2090-004X Impact factor: 1.909
Demographic differences of Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease (VKH) in the literature.
| Author/year | Total: male (%)/female (%); | Age: mean ± SD (range, years) | Race or region | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ohno et al./1977 | 51: 23 (45.1)/28 (54.9) | NA | African American: 13.7% | [ |
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| Snyder and Tessler/1980 | 20: 8 (40)/12 (60) | 39.7 (10–56) | African American: 11 (55%) | [ |
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| Belfort Jr. et al./1988 | 33: 10 (30)/23 (70) | NA | White: 60% | [ |
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| Sasamoto et al./1990 | 47: 29 (61.7)/18 (38.3) | 41.1 (14–64) | Japan | [ |
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| Beniz et al./1991 | 48: 15 (31.2)/33 (68.8) | 33.4 ± 14.5 (15–78) | Hispanic: 75% | [ |
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| Rubsamen and Gass/1991 | 22: 5 (22.7)/17 (77.3) | 35 (13–73) | Hispanic: 54% | [ |
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| Moorthy et al./1995 | 65: 17 (26.2)/48 (73.8) | 32 (7–71) | Hispanic: 51 (78%) | [ |
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| Lertsumitkul et al./1999 | 75: 16 (21.3)/59 (78.7) | 32.8 ± 12.6 (11–72) | White/native American: 22.7% | [ |
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| Sheu et al./2003 | 39: 21 (53.8)/18 (46.2) | 39.82 ± 12.38 | Taiwan | [ |
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| Wakabayashi et al./2003 | 19: 5 (26.3)/14 (73.7) | NA | Japanese | [ |
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| Sheu et al./2004 | 31: 19 (61.3)/12 (38.7) | 38.6 ± 10.6 (20–63) | Taiwan Chinese | [ |
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| Tesavibul and Sansanayuth/2005 | 33: 12 (36.4)/21 (63.6) | 35 ± 13.4 (17–67) | Thai | [ |
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| Sukavatcharin et al./2007 | 48: 18 (37.5)/30 (62.5) | 35 ± 13 | Hispanic | [ |
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| Chee et al./2007 | 89: 38 (42.1)/51 (57.9) | 41.8 ± 14.7 (SE) | Chinese: 75.28% | [ |
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| Khairallah et al./2007 | 49: 17 (34.7)/32 (65.3) | 35 (16–54) | North Africa | [ |
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| Murthy et al./2007 | 45: 7 (15.6)/38 (84.4) | 37 ± 14.2 (14–63) | South India | [ |
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| Tugal-Tutkun et al./2007 | 45: 13 (28.9)/32 (71.1) | 31 ± 14.3 (4–65) | Turkish | [ |
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| Kiyomoto et al./2007 | 68: 29 (42.6)/39 (57.4) | 43.1 ± 14.2 (16–71) | Japanese | [ |
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| Al-Kharashi et al./2007 | 68: 17 (25)/51 (75) | 25 ± 10.3 (7–55) | Saudi Arabia | [ |
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| Hou et al./2008* | 231: 128 (55.4)/103 (44.6) | 33.6 ± 12.4 | Chinese | [ |
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| Chee et al./2009 | 67: 27 (40.3)/40 (59.7) | 42.3 (5.4–70.9) | Chinese: 79.1% | [ |
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| Lai et al./2009 | 35: 18 (51.4)/17 (48.6) | 42.5 ± 18.4 (10–72) | Hong Kong Chinese | [ |
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| Iqniebi et al./2009 | 30: 12 (40)/18 (60) | NA | Saudi Arabia | [ |
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| Meng et al./2009* | 247: 138 (55.9)/109 (44.1) | 33.6 | Chinese | [ |
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| Hou et al./2009* | 307: 171 (55.7)/136 (44.3) | 34.3 ± 10.3 | Chinese | [ |
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| Hu et al./2010* | 379: 197 (51.9)/182 (48.1) | 32.8 ± 9.8 | Chinese | [ |
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| Chee et al./2010 | 28: 13 (46.4)/15 (53.6) | 42.2 (median) (16–77) | Chinese: 64.3% | [ |
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| Jiang et al./2010* | 382: 210 (55)/172 (45) | 33.6 ± 12.4 | Chinese | [ |
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| Shu et al./2010* | 385: 201 (52.2)/184 (47.8) | 34.1 ± 9.6 | Chinese | [ |
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Al | 76: 16 (21.1)/60 (78.9) | 42.1 (11–76) | Mexican Mestizos | [ |
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| Al-Halafi et al./2011 | 256: 95 (37.1)/161 (62.9) | 29 ± 13 | Saudi Arabia | [ |
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| Chen et al./2012* | 519: 290 (55.9)/229 (44.1) | 30.0 ± 13.5 | Chinese | [ |
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| Yang et al./2012 | 38: 17 (44.7)/21 (55.3) | 50 ± 8.4 | Hong Kong Chinese | [ |
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| Chen et al./2012* | 451: 243 (53.9)/208 (46.1) | 33.8 ± 9.3 | Chinese | [ |
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| Morita et al./2013 | 85: 37 (43.5)/48 (56.5) | 47.1 ± 14 | Japanese | [ |
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| Alam et al./2013 | 9: 4 (44.4)/5 (55.6) | 28 (16–43) | Pakistanis: | [ |
*Study from the same VKH research group in China; **P < 0.05.
Demographic differences of sympathetic ophthalmia (SO) in the literature.
| Author/year | Total: male (%)/female (%) | Age: mean ± SD | Cause of SO | Race or region | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chan et al./1995 | 32: 16 (50)/16 (50) | 32.7 ± 23.6 (1–80) | Trauma: 23 (71.9%) | NA | [ |
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| Lin and Zhong/1996 | 30: 21 (70)/9 (30) | 32.3 (6–66) | Trauma: 24 (80%) | Chinese | [ |
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| Castiblanco and Adelman/2009 | 86: 62 (72.1)/24 (27.9) | 46 (3–83) | Trauma: 40 (46.5%) | NA | [ |
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| Galor et al./2009 | 85: 50 (60)/35 (40) | 44 (2–91) | Trauma: 53 (62.4%) | White: 57% | [ |
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| Al-Halafi et al./2011 | 60: 34 (56.7)/26 (43.3) | 36 ± 20 (4–90) | NA | Saudi Arabia | [ |
*P < 0.05.