| Literature DB >> 31571815 |
Horace Massa1, Spyros Y Pipis2, Georgios D Panos2, Temilade Adewoyin2, Athanasios Vergados2, Sudeshna Patra2.
Abstract
Macular edema (ME) is the most common sight-threatening complication in uveitis. The diagnostic and therapeutic management of the uveitic macular edema (UME) might be challenging due to the complex diagnostic workup and the difficulties physicians face to find the underlying cause, and due to its usually recurrent nature and the fact that it can be refractory to conventional treatment. Some of the mild cases can be treated with topical steroids, which can be combined with non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs. However, immunomodulators such as methotrexate, tacrolimus, azathioprine, cyclosporine and mycophenolate mofetil together with anti-tumor necrosis factor-α (anti-TNF alpha) monoclonal antibodies such as adalimumab and infliximab, may be required to control the inflammation and the associated ME in refractory cases, or when an underlying disease is present. This review of the literature will focus mostly on the non-infectious UME.Entities:
Keywords: NSAIDs; anti-TNF alpha; corticosteroids; immunomodulators; macular edema; non-infectious uveitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31571815 PMCID: PMC6750710 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S180580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Anatomic Classification of uveitis following the International Uveitis Study Group classification system (SUN*).
| Anterior uveitis | Anterior chamber | Iritis |
| Iridocyclitis | ||
| Anterior cyclitis | ||
| Intermediate uveitis | Vitreous | Pars planitis |
| Posterior cyclitis | ||
| Hyalitis | ||
| Posterior uveitis | Retina or choroid | Focal, multifocal, or diffuse choroiditis |
| Chorioretinitis | ||
| Retinochoroiditis | ||
| Retinitis | ||
| Neuroretinitis | ||
| Panuveitis | Anterior chamber, vitreous and retina or choroid | |
| * SUN = Standardization of uveitis nomenclature. | ||
Note: Reprinted from the American Journal of Opthalmology, Volume 140, Issue 3, Jabs DA, Nussenblatt RB, Rosenbaum JT, Standardization of Uveitis Nomenclature (SUN) Working Group, Standardization of uveitis nomenclature. Results of the First International Workshop, 509-516, copyright (2005), with permission from Elsevier.5
The SUN* Working Group Descriptors of Uveitis.
| Category | Descriptor | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Onset | Sudden | |
| Insidious | ||
| Duration | Limited | Uveitis lasting <3 months |
| Persistent | Uveitis lasting >3 months | |
| Course | Acute | Episode characterized by |
| Chronic | Repeated episodes separated by periods of inactivity without treatment, lasting >3 months | |
| Recurrent | Persistent uveitis with relapse | |
| *SUN = Standardization of uveitis nomenclature. | ||
Note: Reprinted from the American Journal of Opthalmology, Volume 140, Issue 3, Jabs DA, Nussenblatt RB, Rosenbaum JT, Standardization of Uveitis Nomenclature (SUN) Working Group, Standardization of uveitis nomenclature. Results of the First International Workshop, 509-516, copyright (2005), with permission from Elsevier.5
Figure 1Macular edema secondary to intermediate uveitis in a 58-year-old male patient (left eye). (A) OCT. (B) FFA – typical petaloid pattern.
Abbreviations: OCT ,optical coherence tomography ; FFA, fundus fluorescein angiography.
Figure 2Macular edema secondary to UGH syndrome in a 60-year-old male patient (right eye).
Abbreviation: UGH, uveitis-glaucoma-hyphema.
Non-infectious UME. Summary of the most important studies
| Study | Design | Number of patients/eyes | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vallet et al | Multicenter, | 160 patients | 1. Mean response to treatment: 90% |
| Diaz-Llopis et al | Prospective case series | 131 patients | 1. Mean visual acuity at baseline: 0.38±0.44 logMAR improved to 0.26±0.39 logMAR at month 6. |
| Arida et al | Meta-analysis | 369 patients | 1. 89% response to infliximab vs 60% etanercept (ten patients) |
| Calvo-Rio et al | Multicenter, | 124 patients (221 eyes) | Anti-TNF-alpha used in combination with conventional immunosuppressive treatment At baseline 80 eyes with macular thickening and 49 eyes with cystoid macular edema. Macular edema decreased from 420 μm±119.5 to 271 μm±45.6. Complete response after 12 months: 67.7% |
| Mesquida et al | Retrospective: tocilizumab | 16 eyes of 12 patients | Mean visual acuity at baseline 0.78±0.18 logMAR improved to 0.42±0.17 logMAR at month 12. Mean macular thickness reduction was 274 μm at month 12. Mean duration of macular edema: 13.2 years |
| Calvo-Rio et al | Open-label, multicenter study. | 15 patients (18 eyes) | Visual acuity improved from 0.62±0.3 to 0.84±0.3 after 2 months Macular edema decreased from 295 μm±42.2 to 259.2 μm±10.3 |
| Jaffe et al | Multicenter, multinational Phase III study, adalimumab in non-infectious uveitis | 110 patients adalimumab group vs 107 placebo group | Median time to treatment failure: 13 weeks in placebo group vs 24 weeks in adalimumab group Risk of macular edema recurrence is 67% lower in case of previous treatment with adalimumab |
| Thorne et al for the MUST Research Group | Multicenter, randomized clinical trial | 192 patients (235 eyes with UME) | Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide and intravitreal dexamethasone implant had larger reductions in central subfield thickness than periorbital triamcinolone. Intravitreal dexamethasone implant was noninferior to intravitreal triamcinolone at 8 weeks. The risk of having IOP≥24 mmHg was higher in the intravitreal treatment groups compared to the periocular group. No significant difference between the two intravitreal treatment groups was found. |
Abbreviation: JIA, juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
Figure 3Treatment algorithm for non-infectious uveitic macular edema.
Abbreviations: UME, uveitic macular edema; AZA, azathioprine; MTX, methotrexate; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; IFN, interferon-alpha; PPV, pars plana vitrectomy.