| Literature DB >> 28980216 |
Kristina L Bajema1, Kaivon Pakzad-Vaezi2, Thomas Hawn1, Kathryn L Pepple3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The study aims to report the association between successful uveitis control following anti-tuberculous therapy (ATT) for uveitis associated with a positive tuberculosis (TB) screening test in a low endemic setting. A retrospective chart review of cases between 2010 and 2017 at a tertiary uveitis referral center in the United States of America was conducted. Subjects with any form of uveitis, a positive TB interferon-gamma release assay or tuberculin skin test, and negative evaluation for other causes of uveitis were included. ATT was recommended in all cases and completed therapy was categorized as either adequate or inadequate for active TB infection. Location and severity of inflammation and the use of local versus systemic corticosteroid therapy was assessed at presentation and again after recommendation of ATT.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-tuberculous therapy; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Ocular tuberculosis; Tuberculous uveitis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28980216 PMCID: PMC5628081 DOI: 10.1186/s12348-017-0137-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients diagnosed with tuberculous uveitis
| Baseline characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Median age (IQR), years | 38 (31–58) |
| Men, | 12/20 (60%) |
| Foreign born, | 16/18 (89%) |
| Born in high TB-burden country | 7/18 (39%) |
| Prior clinical history of active TB, | 3/20 (15%) |
| Prior clinical history of LTBI, | 4/20 (20%) |
| Median time from onset of symptoms to ATT (IQR), months | 24 (3–96) |
| Positive screening test for LTBI | 20/20 (100%) |
| QFT-G | 18 |
| TST | 2 |
| Abnormal chest imaging, | 2/19 (11%) |
| HIV test negative, | 14/14 (100%) |
| Active concurrent TB, | 0/20 (0%) |
aActive pulmonary TB excluded in both cases with negative sputum tests for AFB smear, mycobacterial culture, and MTB-PCR
Clinical presentation, treatment details, and clinical outcomes of 20 study patients
| Case | Sex | Uveitis presentation | Unilateral or bilateral | Treatment regimen started | Duration therapy completed (months) | Additional systemic steroids | Uveitis improved |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | Panuveitisa,b | Bilateral | RHd | 6 | No | Yes |
| 2 | M | Posterior uveitis | Unilateral | RHZM | 8 | No | Yes |
| 3 | F | Panuveitis | Unilateral | RHZ | 6 | No | Yes |
| 4 | M | Anterior uveitis | Unilateral | RHZE | 6 | No | Yese |
| 5 | F | Panuveitisa | Unilateral | RHZE | 6 | Yes | Yes |
| 6 | M | Anterior uveitis | Unilateral | – | – | No | Yes |
| 7 | F | Anterior uveitis | Bilateral | RHZE | 18 | Yes | No |
| 8 | M | Posterior uveitisb,c | Bilateral | – | – | Yes | No |
| 9 | M | Panuveitis | Unilateral | RHZE | 9 | Yes | Yes |
| 10 | M | Anterior uveitisc | Bilateral | RHZE | 6 | Yes | Yes |
| 11 | F | Panuveitisa,b | Bilateral | RHZE | 6 | Yes | Yes |
| 12 | M | Posterior uveitisb | Unilateral | RHZM | 5 | Yes | Yes |
| 13 | F | Anterior, intermediate uveitisa | Bilateral | RHZM | 9 | No | Yes |
| 14 | F | Anterior, intermediate uveitisa | Bilateral | RHZM | 6 | No | Yes |
| 15 | F | Panuveitisa,c | Bilateral | RHZE | Sporadic | Yes | No |
| 16 | M | Anterior, intermediate uveitisb | Bilateral | – | – | Yes | No |
| 17 | M | Anterior uveitisa | Unilateral | RHZE | 7 | No | Yes |
| 18 | F | Anterior uveitis | Unilateral | RPTH | 3 | Yes | No |
| 19 | M | Panuveitis uveitis | Bilateral | RHZE | 6 | Yes | Yes |
| 20 | M | Panuveitis | Bilateral | RHZL | 7 | Yes | Yes |
aCases born in a high TB-burden country: 1, 5, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17
bCases with underlying immunosuppression: 1, 8, 11, 12, 16
cCases with reported prior active TB: 8, 10, 15
dATT abbreviations: R—rifampin, RPT—rifapentine, H—isoniazid, Z—pyrazinamide, E—ethambutol, M—moxifloxacin
eInflammation improved before the start of ATT
Fig. 1Clinical improvement stratified by initial uveitis presentation and adequate or inadequate ATT for active TB. Numbers presented as individuals