| Literature DB >> 27008848 |
Marcelo Mendes Lavezzo1, Viviane Mayumi Sakata1, Celso Morita1, Ever Ernesto Caso Rodriguez1, Smairah Frutuoso Abdallah1, Felipe T G da Silva1, Carlos Eduardo Hirata1, Joyce Hisae Yamamoto2.
Abstract
Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease (VKHD) is a rare granulomatous inflammatory disease that affects pigmented structures, such as eye, inner ear, meninges, skin and hair. This disease is mainly a Th1 lymphocyte mediated aggression to melanocytes after a viral trigger in the presence of HLA-DRB1*0405 allele. The absence of ocular trauma or previous intraocular surgery sets VKHD appart from sympathetic ophthalmia, its main differential diagnosis. The disease has an acute onset of bilateral blurred vision with hyperemia preceded by flu-like symptoms. The acute uveitic stage is characterized by a diffuse choroiditis with serous retinal detachment and optic disc hyperemia and edema. Fluorescein angiography in this phase demonstrates multiple early hyperfluorescent points. After the acute uveitic stage, ocular and integumentary system pigmentary changes may appear. Ocular findings may be accompanied by lymphocytic meningitis, hearing impairment and/or tinnitus in a variable proportion of patients. Prompt diagnosis followed by early, aggressive and long-term treatment with high-dose corticosteroids is most often ensued by good visual outcomes. However, some patients may experience chronic uveal inflammation with functional eye deterioration. The current review discusses the general features of VKHD, including epidemiology, classification into categories, differential diagnosis and current therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Review; Uveitis; Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27008848 PMCID: PMC4806431 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-016-0412-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Hypothetical scheme of VKHD pathogenesis. Courtesy of Arquivos Brasileiros de Oftalmologia – Damico, F.M., et al., New insights into Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease. Arq Bras Oftalmol, 2009. 72 [3]: p. 413-20 [39]
Histopathological aspects and their clinical correspondents in Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease [53, 54]
| Histopathologic findings | Clinical correspondents/Ancillary exams |
|---|---|
| Diffuse granulomatous inflammatory infiltrate of choroid (lymphocytes, macrophages, epithelioid cells, multinucleated giant cells) | In the acute and chronic stages: |
| Creamy white lesions in deep retina/choroid | |
| Diffuse choroid thickening (US, EDI-OCT) | |
| Dark dots (?) (ICGA) | |
| Dalen-Fuchs nodules (conglomerate between Bruch’s membrane and RPE consisting of lymphocytes, pigment-laden macrophages, epithelioid cells, and proliferated RPE) | In the acute stage: |
| Focal leakage at the RPE level (?) (FA) | |
| Choroidal melanocytes without melanin granules | In the convalescent stage: |
| “Sunset glow fundus” (diffuse depigmentation) | |
| Focal RPE atrophy with retinal and choroidal adhesion | In the convalescent stage: |
| Atrophic nummular hypopigmented lesions in the mid periphery | |
| Window defect in FA (OCT) | |
| RPE hyperplasia | In the convalescent stage: |
| Pigment clumps (OCT, FAF (?)) | |
| RPE hyperplasia without melanin granules | Subretinal fibrosis (OCT) |
| Degenerated photoreceptor | Elipsoidal layer disruption (OCT) |
| Abnormal (ERG) |
US ultrasound, EDI-OCT enhanced depth imaging-optical coherence tomography, ICGA indocyanine green angiography, RPE retinal pigment epithelium, FA fluorescein angiography, FAF fundus autofluorescence imaging, ERG electroretinography
Revised Diagnostic Criteria of Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease proposed by the International Nomenclature Commitee [59]
| 1. No history of penetrating ocular trauma or surgery preceding the initial onset of uveitis. |
| 2. No clinical or laboratory evidence suggestive of other ocular disease entities. |
| 3. Bilateral ocular involvement (a or b must be met, depending on the stage of disease when the patient is examined): |
| a. Early manifestations of disease: |
| I. Evidence of diffuse choroiditis (with or without anterior uveitis, vitreous inflammatory reaction or optic disc hyperemia), which may manifest as (A) focal areas of subretinal fluid, or (B) bullous exudative retinal detachments. |
| II. If equivocal fundus findings, then both: |
| A. Fluorescein angiography showing focal delayed choroidal perfusion, multiple areas of pinpoint leakage, large placoid areas of hyperfluorescence, pooling within subretinal fluid, and optic nerve staining; |
| B. Ultrasonography showing diffuse choroidal thickening without evidence of posterior scleritis. |
| b. Late manifestations of disease: |
| I. History suggestive of prior presence of early findings noted in 3a and either (II) or (III) below, or multiple signs from (III) below: |
| II. Ocular depigmentation: either (A) sunset glow fundus or (B) Sugiura sign. |
| III. Other ocular signs including (A) nummular chorioretinal depigmented scars, or (B) retinal pigment epithelium clumping and/or migration, or (C) recurrent or chronic anterior uveitis. |
| 4. Neurological/auditory findings (may resolve by time of evaluation): |
| a. Meningismus (malaise, fever, headache, nausea, abdominal pain, stiffness of the neck and back, or a combination of these factors); note that headache alone is not sufficient to meet definition of meningismus. |
| b. Tinnitus |
| c. Cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis |
| 5. Integumentary findings (not preceding onset of central nervous system or ocular disease): |
| a. Alopecia, or |
| b. Poliosis, or |
| c. Vitiligo. |
| Complete VKHD: criteria 1–5 must be present |
| Incomplete VKHD: criteria 1–3 and either 4 or 5 must be present |
| Probable VKHD (isolated ocular disease): criteria 1–3 must be present |
Fig. 2Acute uveitic stage: a and b: Right and left eye of a patient in the acute stage of Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease, presenting white- yellowish deep round lesions, hyperemia and blurring of the optic disc and exudative retinal detachment; c and d: Early fluorescein angiography, showing pinpoints and optic disc hyperfluorescence; e and f: Increase in pinpoints hyperfluorescence (arrows) and optic disc leakage; g and h: Coalescence of pinpoints hyperfluorescence resulting in pooling of the contrast (arrows) in exudative retinal detachment areas
Fig. 3OCT scans in the acute uveitic stage. a and c Fundoscopic aspect with optic disc swelling and hyperemia, besides multiple yellowish deep round lesions and exudative retinal detachment. b OCT scan showing a bullous unique exudative retinal detachment with hyperreflective material within the subretinal fluid (fibrin) and a strand continuous to the ellipsoid zone (arrow); d OCT scan of an exudative retinal detachment, with multiple compartments (asterisk) separated by membranous strutures
Fig. 4Right eye of a patient in the chronic stage. a: Fundoscopy with a mild depigmentation; b: OCT scan showing an increased choroidal thickness of 444 μm; c and d: Indocyanine green angiography showing multiple dark dots (arrows) and an uneven background choroidal fluorescence visible at the mid phase of ICGA
Prevalence of extraocular manifestations in Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease
| Japan, 2007 [ | USA, 1991 [ | Brazil, 2009 [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |
| Meningeal signs | 80 % | 67 % | 18 % |
| Pleocytosis | 90 % | - | - |
| Tinnitus | 53 % | 17 % | 24 % |
| Alopecia | 7 % | 13 % | 9 % |
| Poliosis | 18 % | 6 % | 22 % |
| Vitiligo | 13 % | 10 % | 16 % |
| VKHD categories | |||
| Complete | 22 % | - | 15 % |
| Incomplete | 65 % | - | 55 % |
| Probable | 13 % | - | 30 % |
Fig. 5Poliosis of the lashes eyebrows and scalp hair
Differential diagnosis of Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease
| Sympathetic ophthalmia | Previous penetrating ocular trauma or intraocular surgery |
|---|---|
| Noninfectious choroiditis | Acute posterior multifocal placoid pigment epitheliopathy (APMPPE) |
| Birdshot chorioretinopathy | |
| Multifocal choroiditis and panuveitis (MCP) | |
| Multiple evanescent white dot syndrome (MEWDS) | |
| Infectious choroiditis | Syphilis |
| Tuberculosis | |
| Others inflammatory disorders | Posterior scleritis |
| Sarcoidosis | |
| Lupus choroidopathy | |
| Noninflammatory disorders | Hypertensive choroidopathy |
| Bilateral diffuse melanocytic hyperplasia | |
| Specific hypertensive illness of gestation | |
| Uveal effusion syndrome | |
| Masquerade syndrome | Carcinoma |
| Leukemia | |
| Lymphoma | |
| Metastasis |
Fig. 6Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease treatment flowchart under consideration in the Uveitis Service, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, São Paulo University, São Paulo, SP, Brazil
Treatment of Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease: drugs, dosages and main side effects [126, 127]
| Drug | Dosage | Main side effects |
|---|---|---|
| Corticosteroids | ||
| Prednisone or prednisolone | 1–1.5 mg/kg/day, gradual tapering along a minimum 6 month-period | hyperglicemia, hypertension, osteoporosis, Cushingoid appearance, myopathy, cataract, glaucoma |
| Pulsetherapy of methylprednisolone | 1 g/day during 3 days, followed by oral prednisone | |
| Antimetabolites | ||
| Azathioprine | 1–2.5 mg/kg/day | myelosuppression, gastrointestinal disturbances, infection |
| Methotrexate | 7.5–25 mg/week | nausea, vomiting, abnormalities in liver function tests, infection |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | 1–3 g/day | gastrointestinal disturbances with diarrhea, infection |
| Calcineurin inhibitors | ||
| Cyclosporine A | up to 5 mg/kg/day, trough 0.1–0.2 μg/L (whole blood) | nephrotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, hyperglycemia, hypertension, hirsutism, gum hyperplasia and neurological disorders |
| Biological agents | ||
| Infliximab (intravenous) | 5 mg/kg at 0,2 and 6 weeks, followed by 5 mg/kg every 6–8 weeks | reactivation of latent tuberculosis, lymphoproliferative diseases |
| Adalimumab (SubQ) | 40 mg every other week | headache, infection |
| Alkylating agents | ||
| Cyclophosphamide | 1–2 mg/kg/day | myelossupression, hair loss, nausea, vomiting, loss of fertility, cancer risk, infection, bladder toxicity |
Prevalence of the most common complications in VKHD
| Author | Number of eyes | % Cataract | % Glaucoma | % CNV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ohno [ | 102 | 30 | 20 | Not available |
| Snyder [ | 40 | 16 | Not available | 2,5 |
| Rubsamen [ | 52 | 36 | 45 | 9 |
| Forster [ | 84 | Not available | 38 | Not available |
| Moorthy [ | 130 | 38 | Not available | 12 |
| Read [ | 101 | 42 | 27 | 11 |