| Literature DB >> 26351570 |
Jesús Barrio-Barrio1, Alfonso L Sabater1, Elvira Bonet-Farriol1, Álvaro Velázquez-Villoria1, Juan C Galofré2.
Abstract
Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO) is an autoimmune inflammatory disorder associated with thyroid disease which affects ocular and orbital tissues. GO follows a biphasic course in which an initial active phase of progression is followed by a subsequent partial regression and a static inactive phase. Although the majority of GO patients have a mild, self-limiting, and nonprogressive ocular involvement, about 3-7% of GO patients exhibit a severe sight-threatening form of the disease due to corneal exposure or compressive optic neuropathy. An appropriate assessment of both severity and activity of the disease warrants an adequate treatment. The VISA (vision, inflammation, strabismus, and appearance), and the European Group of Graves' Orbitopathy (EUGOGO) classifications are the two widely used grading systems conceived to assess the activity and severity of GO and guide the therapeutic decision making. A critical analysis of classification, assessment, and management systems is reported. A simplified "GO activity assessment checklist" for routine clinical practice is proposed. Current treatments are reviewed and management guidelines according to the severity and activity of the disease are provided. New treatment modalities such as specific monoclonal antibodies, TSH-R antagonists, and other immunomodulatory agents show a promising outcome for GO patients.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26351570 PMCID: PMC4553342 DOI: 10.1155/2015/249125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2090-004X Impact factor: 1.909
NO SPECS modified classification [22].
| Class | Grade | Suggestions for grading |
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| 0 | No physical signs or symptoms | |
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| I | Only signs | |
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| II | Soft tissue involvement | |
| 0 | Absent | |
| a | Minimal | |
| b | Moderate | |
| c | Marked | |
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| III | Proptosis (3 mm or more of normal upper limits with or without symptoms) | |
| 0 | Absent | |
| a | 3 or 4 mm over upper normal | |
| b | 5 to 7 mm increase | |
| c | 8 mm increase | |
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| IV | Extraocular muscle involvement (usually with diplopia) | |
| 0 | Absent | |
| a | Limitation of motion at extremes of gaze | |
| b | Evident restriction of motion | |
| c | Fixation of a globe or globes | |
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| V | Corneal involvement (primarily due to lagophthalmos) | |
| 0 | Absent | |
| a | Stippling of cornea | |
| b | Ulceration | |
| c | Clouding, necrosis, and perforation | |
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| VI | Sight loss (due to optic nerve involvement) | |
| 0 | Absent | |
| a | Disc pallor or choking, or visual field defect, vision 20/20–20/60 | |
| b | The same, but vision 20/70–20/200 | |
| c | Blidness, vision less than 20/200 | |
Clinical Activity Score (CAS) (amended by EUGOGO after Mourits et al.). One point is given for the presence of each of the parameters assessed. The sum of all points defines clinical activity: active ophthalmopathy if the score is above 3/7 at the first examination or above 4/10 in successive examinations.
| For initial CAS, only score items 1–7 | |
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| 1 | Spontaneous orbital pain |
| 2 | Gaze evoked orbital pain |
| 3 | Eyelid swelling that is considered to be due to active GO |
| 4 | Eyelid erythema |
| 5 | Conjunctival redness that is considered to be due to active GO |
| 6 | Chemosis |
| 7 | Inflammation of caruncle OR plica |
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| Patients assessed after follow-up (1–3 months) can be scored out of 10 by including items 8–10 | |
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| 8 | Increase of >2 mm in proptosis |
| 9 | Decrease in uniocular ocular excursion in any one direction of >8° |
| 10 | Decrease of acuity equivalent to 1 Snellen line |
Figure 1(a) Sagittal CT scan showing severe exophthalmos. (b) Coronal CT scan: apical crowding causing bilateral DON.
VISA Inflammatory Index (I) (Dolman and Rootman 2006 [25], ITEDS modified). Patients with moderate inflammatory index (less than 4 of 10) are managed conservatively. Patients with high scores (above 5 of 10) or with evidence of progression in the inflammation are offered a more aggressive therapy.
| Sign or symptom | Score |
|---|---|
| Caruncular edema | 0: absent |
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| Chemosis | 0: absent |
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| Conjunctival redness | 0: absent |
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| Lid redness | 0: absent |
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| Lid edema | 0: absent |
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| Retrobulbar ache |
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| Diurnal variation | 0: absent; 1: present |
Figure 2Chemosis. Notice the conjunctiva separated from the sclera and behind the grey line (arrows) and diffuse conjunctival redness.
Figure 3Inflammation of the plica (arrow) with diffuse conjunctival redness.
Protocol to assess the severity of Graves' ophthalmopathy (EUGOGO). Some of the signs may be assessed by comparison with the image atlas provided by the EUGOGO (http://www.eugogo.eu/).
| Soft tissues |
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| Eyelid measurements |
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| Proptosis | Measurement with Hertel's exophthalmometer. Recording of intercanthal distance. |
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| Ocular motility |
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| Cornea |
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| Optic neuropathy | (i) Visual acuity (Logmar or Snellen) |
Orientative therapeutic protocol for Graves' ophthalmopathy (see text for bibliographic references).
| All patients | Restore euthyroidism | |
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| Avoid smoking | ||
| Conservative local measures | ||
| Severity | Activity | |
| Active | Nonactive | |
| Mild | (i) Artificial tears | (i) Artificial tears |
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| Moderate-severe | (i) Intravenous methylprednisolone: | 1st, orbital decompression (2 or 3 walls depending on the degree of exophthalmos) |
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| Threat to vision | ||
| Dysthyroid optic neuropathy | Methylprednisolone 1 g intravenously × 3 days, repeat after a week | Urgent deep orbital medial wall decompression |
| Severe exposure keratopathy | Intravenous methylprednisolone when relevant orbital inflammation; palpebral closure, lubrication, tarsorrhaphy, botulinum toxin in Müller muscle, and orbital decompression if other measures are inefficient | Lateral tarsorrhaphy, orbital decompression, amniotic membrane transplant, and corneal transplant |
Figure 4Threatening-to-vision GO. (a) Initial presentation of a patient with threatening-to-vision GO. LE: corneal breakdown, chemosis, conjunctival redness, eyelid swelling, swollen caruncle, retrobulbar ache at rest and with gaze, diurnal variation (inflammatory score: 9/10), proptosis > 2 mm, optic neuropathy, and extraocular muscle restriction (3/3 progression score). (b) Appearance after methylprednosolone IV treatment, amniotic membrane transplant, and lateral tarsorrhaphy in LE. (c) Appearance after bilateral orbital decompression and levator recession surgery (Dr. Barrio-Barrio and Dr. Fernandez-Hermida performed the surgical procedures).
| Inflammatory signs and symptoms | |||
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| 0 | 1 | 2 | |
| Diurnal variation | Absent | (i) Inflammation worse with the head dependent after sleep or | |
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| Retrobulbar ache at rest | Absent | Present | |
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| Retrobulbar ache with gaze | Absent | Present | |
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| Lid edema | (i) Absent or | Present but without redundant tissues | Present and causing bulging in the palpebral skin (tense subcutaneous fluid): |
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| Lid redness | (i) Absent or | Present | |
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| Conjunctival redness | (i) Absent or | Diffuse redness, covering at least one quadrant assessed without slit-lamp at 1 meter from the patient | |
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| Chemosis | (i) Absent or | Separation of conjunctiva from sclera present in >1/3 of the total height of the palpebral aperture Conjunctiva behind posterior to the grey line | Conjunctiva anterior to the grey line |
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| Inflammation of caruncle OR plica | Absent | (i) Plica is prolapsed through closed eyelids or | |
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| Total inflammatory score: /10 | |||
Score worst eye.
| Progression symptoms (changes in the previous 1–3 months) | ||
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| 0 | 1 | |
| Optic Neuropathy | Same or Better | Disc swelling or atrophy thought to be due to GO, or 2 of the following: |
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| Extraocular muscle ductions | Same or Better | Decrease in uniocular ocular excursion in any one direction of ≥12° |
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| Proptosis | Same or Better | Increase of ≥2 mm in proptosis |