| Literature DB >> 29593377 |
Artemis Matsou1, Konstantinos T Tsaousis2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sarcoidosis constitutes one of the leading causes of ocular inflammation. Chronic ocular sarcoidosis can affect any segment of the eye and its adnexa, producing a wide range of clinical manifestations and severity. If left untreated, permanent visual impairment or even blindness may ensue. Treatment approaches vary from topical therapy to systemic agents that induce immunosuppression to different levels according to disease severity.Entities:
Keywords: anti-TNFα; biologic agents; immunosuppression; ocular sarcoidosis; uveitis
Year: 2018 PMID: 29593377 PMCID: PMC5863717 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S128949
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
IWOS criteria for diagnosing ocular sarcoidosis: introducing seven clinical signs suggestive of ocular sarcoidosis, five laboratory investigations in suspected ocular sarcoidosis, and four levels of certainty
| • |
| 1. Mutton-fat KPs/small granulomatous KPs and/or iris nodules (Koeppe/Busacca) |
| 2. TM nodules and/or tent-shaped PAS |
| 3. Vitreous opacities displaying snowballs/strings of pearls |
| 4. Multiple chorioretinal peripheral lesions (active and/or atrophic) |
| 5. Nodular and/or segmental periphlebitis (± candle-wax drippings) and/or retinal macroaneurysm in an inflamed eye |
| 6. Optic disk nodule(s)/granuloma(s) and/or solitary choroidal nodule |
| 7. Bilaterality |
| • |
| 1. Negative tuberculin skin test in a BCG-vaccinated patient or in a patient having had a positive tuberculin skin test previously |
| 2. Elevated serum ACE levels and/or elevated serum lysozyme |
| 3. Chest X-ray revealing BHL |
| 4. Abnormal liver-enzyme tests |
| 5. Chest CT scan in patients with a negative chest X-ray result |
| • |
| 1. Definite: biopsy-supported diagnosis with a compatible uveitis |
| 2. Presumed: biopsy not done, but chest X-ray positive showing BHL associated with a compatible uveitis |
| 3. Probable: biopsy not done, no BHL on chest X-ray, but there were three of the above intraocular signs and two positive laboratory tests |
| 4. Possible: lung biopsy negative, but at least four of the above signs and two positive laboratory investigations present |
Abbreviations: ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; BHL, bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy; CT, computed tomography; IWOS, International Workshop on Ocular Sarcoidosis; KPs, keratic precipitates; PAS, peripheral anterior synechiae; TM, trabecular meshwork.
Spectrum of ocular manifestations of sarcoidosis
| Anterior | Iritis/iridocyclitis |
| Iris nodules (Busacca, Koeppe)/granuloma | |
| Keratic precipitates | |
| Anterior and posterior synechiae | |
| Trabecular meshwork nodules/granulomas | |
| Intermediate | Pars planitis |
| Vitritis | |
| Snowballs, snowbanking, string of pearls | |
| Peripheral vasculitis | |
| Posterior | Periphlebitis |
| Choroidal granuloma | |
| Retinitis | |
| Multifocal choroiditis | |
| Chorioretinitis | |
| Acute posterior multifocal placoid | |
| pigment epitheliopathy (APMPPE) | |
| Serpiginous choroiditis | |
| Choroidal neovascularization | |
| Vaso-occlusive disease | |
| Vitreous hemorrhage | |
| Exudative retinal detachment | |
| Cystoid macular edema | |
| Panuveitis | All three segments involved |
| Optic neuritis | |
| Papilledema | |
| Optic nerve head granuloma | |
| Pupillary abnormalities | |
| Cranial neuropathy | |
| Increased intracranial pressure | |
| Nystagmus | |
| Hydrocephalus | |
| Visual hallucinations | |
| Visual field defects | |
| Periorbital erythematous eyelid swelling | |
| Eyelid nodules/granulomas | |
| Entropion | |
| Trichiasis | |
| Madarosis | |
| Conjunctival nodules | |
| Cicatricial conjunctival scarring | |
| Keratoconjunctivitis sicca (KCS) | |
| Conjunctival granulomas | |
| Follicular conjunctivitis | |
| Symblepharon | |
| Scleritis/episcleritis | |
| KCS | |
| Superficial punctate keratitis | |
| Band keratopathy | |
| Interstitial keratitis | |
| Peripheral ulcerative keratitis | |
| Lacrimal gland inflammation/infiltration | |
| Nasolacrimal obstruction | |
| Dacryocystitis | |
| Ptosis | |
| Proptosis | |
| Globe displacement | |
| Extraocular muscle infiltration | |
| Extraocular muscle entrapment | |
| Optic nerve sheath involvement with | |
| optic nerve compression | |
| Glaucoma | |
| Cataract | |
| Cystoid macular edema | |
| Epiretinal membrane | |
| Choroidal neovascularization | |
| Vitreous opacities | |
| Macular atrophy |
Figure 1Sarcoid-related panuveitis with vitreous haze and right-eye optic disk swelling.
Note: ×1.84 at 50° (TRC-50DX; Topcon Corporation, Tokyo, Japan).
Figure 2Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography.
Note: Optic nerve-head granuloma, adjacent choroidal neovascular membrane with inner segment/outer segment (ellipsoid zone) disruption, and small amount of subretinal fluid in lung biopsy-proven sarcoidosis patient.
Treatment options in sarcoidosis induced uveitis according to location of inflammation and severity
| Topical (eyedrops) | Prednisolone acetate 1% |
| Prednisolone sodium phosphate 0.5% | |
| Difluprednate 0.05% | |
| Dexamethasone 0.1% | |
| Rimexolone 1% | |
| Hydrocortisone acetate 1% | |
| Loteprednol 0.2% and 0.5% | |
| Fluorometholone 0.1% and 0.25% | |
| Betamethasone 1% | |
| Periocular | Triamcinolone acetonide (20–40 mg) |
| Intraocular (implants) | Dexamethasone implant (0.7 mg) |
| Triamcinolone acetonide (1–4 mg) | |
| Fluocinolone acetonide (0.19 mg and 0.59 mg) | |
| Antimetabolites | Methotrexate 7.5–25 mg/week PO/SC/IM |
| Azathioprine 1–4 mg/kg/day PO | |
| Mycophenolate mofetil 1–2 g/day PO | |
| Sulfasalazine | |
| Leflunomide 100 mg/day PO | |
| Alkylating agents | Cyclophosphamide 1–3 mg/kg/day PO/IV |
| Chlorambucil 0.1–0.2 mg/kg/day PO | |
| Calcineurin inhibitors | Cyclosporine A 2.5–1 mg/kg/day PO |
| Tacrolimus 0.15–0.3 mg/kg/day PO | |
| Sirolimus | |
| Anti-TNFα | Infliximab (3–5 mg/kg loading, then |
| 3–10 mg/kg every 4–8 weeks IV) | |
| Adalimumab (loading dose 80 mg, then 40 mg every 2 weeks SC) | |
| Golimumab (50 mg SC monthly) | |
| Interleukin inhibitors | Certolizumab (50 mg SC monthly) |
| IL6-receptor antagonist | Toclizumab (4 mg/kg IV every 4 weeks) |
| Anakinra (100 mg/day SC) | |
| IL1-receptor antagonist | Daclizumab (1–2 mg/kg doses IV in 4-week intervals) |
| IL2-receptor antagonist | |
| Others | |
| Chimeric monoclonal antibody against CD20 on B-cell surface | Rituximab (1 g every 2 weeks IV) |
Note:
Recommended doses data from Jabs et al.96
Abbreviations: PO, per os (oral); SC, subcutaneous; IM, intramuscular; IV, intravenous.
Recent studies evaluating the use of adalimumab in sarcoid-associated uveitis
| Study | Design | Etiology of uveitis | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Suhler et al | Multicenter, open-label, prospective | 31 patients, 6/31 (19.3%) sarcoidosis | 6/6 clinical responders at 10 weeks, 3/6 secondary failure at 50 weeks |
| Taylor et al | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multinational, Phase III study | 217 patients | Adalimumab found to be associated with a lower risk of uveitic flare or visual impairment and with more adverse events and serious adverse events than placebo |
| Airody et al | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multinational, Phase III study | 226 patients | Adalimumab significantly reduced the risk of uveitic flare or loss of visual acuity in patients with inactive, uninfectious intermediate, posterior, or panuveitis |
| Riancho-Zarrabeitia et al | Open-label, multicenter, retrospective study | 17 patients with sarcoid uveitis (10 received adalimumab, 7 infliximab) | Anti-TNFα therapy effective in sarcoid uveitis patients refractory to conventional immunosuppressive therapy; infliximab and adalimumab allowed substantial reduction in prednisone dose, despite having failed standard therapy |
| Mercier et al | Monocentric observational retrospective study | 21 patients | Anti-TNFα therapy effective on macular edema with a statistically significant reduction of MMT at M3, M6, and M12; regarding sarcoidosis, difficult to interpret, because only two patients were involved |
| Erckens et al | Prospective case series | 26 sarcoidosis patients with refractory posterior uveitis | Intraocular inflammatory signs showed improvement in 22 patients (85%) and stabilization in four patients (15%); at 12 months, no recurrences were reported in those successfully treated |