| Literature DB >> 29204932 |
Erika Marie Damato1, Sarah Dawson1, Xiaoxuan Liu2, Chandoshi Mukherjee1, John Horsburgh3, Alastair K Denniston3,4, Edward Moran5, Martin Dedicoat6, Philip Ian Murray7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Uveitis involving the posterior segment is a significant and potentially blinding condition. The diagnosis and treatment of patients with uveitis associated with tuberculosis remains controversial, and commonly, patients are systemically well. Use of the interferon-gamma release assays has added to the controversy, as the significance of a positive test may be uncertain. We aim to report the outcomes of anti-tuberculous treatment in a cohort of patients treated in Birmingham, for presumed "ocular tuberculosis", based on clinical findings, systemic assessment and specific testing for tuberculosis.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-tuberculous therapy; Interferon-gamma release assay; Tuberculosis; Uveitis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29204932 PMCID: PMC5714940 DOI: 10.1186/s12348-017-0141-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Characteristics of the patient cohort
| Gender (number of patients (%)) | ||
| Male | 33 | 61% |
| Female | 21 | 39% |
| Age, years, mean (range) | 44 (17–69) | |
| Ethnicity (number of patients (%)) | ||
| Asian | 31 | 57% |
| Black | 11 | 20.37% |
| Not specified | 12 | 22.22% |
| Diabetic (number of patients (%)) | 8 | 14.81% |
| Site of uveitis (number of patients (%)) | ||
| Anterior | 6 (11.11%) | |
| Intermediate | 15 (27.78%) | |
| Posterior | 12 (22.22%) | |
| Panuveitis | 19 (35.19%) | |
| Other | 2 (3.70%) | |
| Bilateral disease (number of patients (%)) | 41.58(77%) | |
| Uveitis features present (NB some patients may have had more than one feature) | ||
| Nodular scleritis | 1 | |
| Choroiditis | 7 | |
| Granulomatous anterior uveitis/ mutton fat KP | 7 | |
| Retinal vasculitis | 5 | |
| Panuveitis | 13 | |
| Intermediate uveitis | 18 | |
| Not recorded | 3 | |
| Maintenance treatment prior to ATT | Number of patients (%) | |
| Unknown | 8 (14.80) | |
| Nil | 13 (24.10) | |
| Topical steroid alone | 20 (37) | |
| Oral steroid alone | 3 (5.60) | |
| Oral steroid and immunosuppression | 2 (3.70) | |
| Topical steroid and immunosuppression | 1 (1.90) | |
| Topical and systemic steroid | 7 (13) | |
Investigations to support TB
| Number of patients | |
|---|---|
| No details available | 4 |
| Chest CT changes | 4 |
| With positive T-spot or Mantoux test | 3 |
| Positive Mantoux alone | 15 |
| Positive T-spot alone | 12 |
| Positive T-spot and Mantoux test | 2 |
| Typical X-ray changes present | 6 |
| With a positive T-spot and/or Mantoux test | 6 |
| Systemic symptoms presenta | 11 |
| With a positive T-spot and/or Mantoux test | 7 |
| With consistent CT or Chest X-ray findings | 3 |
aOne patient underwent a bone marrow biopsy which confirmed mycobacterium tuberculosis
Treatment regimens
| R alone | 2 |
| R + E | 2 |
| R + Z | 1 |
| RHZ | 9 |
| REZ | 3 |
| RHZE | 27 |
| Anti-TB (unknown specific treatment) | 3 |
| Additional prednisone | 37 |
| Non-compliant | 7 |
| Mean duration of therapy | 6.8 months (range 4–12) |
*Rifampicin R, isoniazid H, pyrazinamide Z, ethambutol E
Fig. 1Kaplan-Meier Survival curves showing: (a) time to flare-up for patients with post ATT followup data, (b) time to flare-up for patients with both pre and post ATT data and (c) time to flare-up for patients in group 1 and group 2 where group 1 were treated with ATT within 8 months of their first uveitis attack and group 2 were treated more than 8 months after their first uveitis attack