Literature DB >> 31571815

Macular edema associated with non-infectious uveitis: pathophysiology, etiology, prevalence, impact and management challenges.

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.
© 2019 Massa et al.

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


Introduction

Uveitis is the inflammation of the uveal tract, the vascular layer between the sclera and the neuroretina, which can lead to significant visual impairment. Uveal tract consists posteriorly of the choroid, in the middle part of the ciliary body and anteriorly of the iris. The retina has a double blood supply and each one has a blood-retinal barrier. Choroidal vasculature covers 80% of eye’s blood supply. The inner blood-retina barrier (BRB) is formed by tight junctions between adjacent endothelial cells and the outer BRB by tight junctions between the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells (tight junction proteins include zonula occludens, occludins and VE-cadherins). The outer BRB is essential for maintaining the integrity of the retina and is the one responsible for removal of the metabolic wastes and transportation of nutrients, water and ions. It also separates the neuroretina from the fenestrated choriocapillaris.1 Inflammation to any of the uveal tract structure is called uveitis. Uveitis can be classified further into anterior, intermediate, posterior and panuveitis according to the primary location of the inflammation. The most common form of intraocular inflammation is anterior uveitis (AU), followed by posterior uveitis and panuveitis, while intermediate uveitis is the least common.2,3 Classification of uveitis following the International Uveitis Study Group classification system (SUN)4–6 is depicted in Tables 1 and 2.
Table 1

Anatomic Classification of uveitis following the International Uveitis Study Group classification system (SUN*).

Type of uveitisPrimary site of inflammationIncludes
Anterior uveitisAnterior chamberIritis
Iridocyclitis
Anterior cyclitis
Intermediate uveitisVitreousPars planitis
Posterior cyclitis
Hyalitis
Posterior uveitisRetina or choroidFocal, multifocal, or diffuse choroiditis
Chorioretinitis
Retinochoroiditis
Retinitis
Neuroretinitis
PanuveitisAnterior chamber, vitreous and retina or choroid
* SUN = Standardization of uveitis nomenclature.† As determined clinically

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

Table 2

The SUN* Working Group Descriptors of Uveitis.

CategoryDescriptorComment
OnsetSudden
Insidious
DurationLimitedUveitis lasting <3 months
PersistentUveitis lasting >3 months
CourseAcuteEpisode characterized bysudden onset and limited duration
ChronicRepeated episodes separated by periods of inactivity without treatment, lasting >3 months
RecurrentPersistent uveitis with relapsein <3 month·, after discontinuing treatment
*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

Anatomic Classification of uveitis following the International Uveitis Study Group classification system (SUN*). 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. 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

Pathophysiology of uveitic macular edema (UME)

The main cause leading to the UME is the breakdown of either inner either outer or both BRBs and is a consequence of chronic inflammation. Extracellular fluid is accumulated either in the intraretinal or the subretinal space.7 A UME might complicate an anterior, intermediate or a posterior uveitis. The UME can be found in the outer nuclear layer or extend more superficially or deep before resulting to affect all retinal layers, and might even present in the form of a serous retinal detachment due to an RPE dysfunction.8,9 In all cases, it appears to result from the sum-up of cytotoxic and vasogenic effects due to the immunological aggression.10 UME occurs when there is compromised equilibrium of water influx and efflux as a result of the inflammation and the overwhelming of compensatory mechanisms. A breach in the BRB will lead to a vasogenic edema due to the increase of oncotic pressure. Sometimes a dysfunction of the RPE pump and transmembrane ionic channels (Na+, K+, Cl-, HCO3-) and aquaporin 1 (AQP1) might be the cause; in this case no evidential leak is visible on the fluorescein angiography but a serous retinal detachment might exist.11,12 Different therapeutic strategies and pathophysiology implicate in the acute phase of inflammation and chronic stages where atrophy and fibrosis occur.13 The inner BRB breakdown can be triggered by many factors, including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), TNF-a, TGF-β, IL-1, angiotensin II (pro-inflammatory cytokines), adenosine, histamine and glucose. The VEGF is a protein greatly produced by Müller cells and cells that promote neovascularization and causes degradation of tight junction proteins by intracellular phosphorylations.14,15 Müller cells are the most important macroglial cells and their role is to ensure the homeostasis of the retinal extracellular milieu, facilitating the transfer of nutrients and evacuating metabolic by-products.16 They ensure structural integrity and provide a link between neural elements and the vascular network. Müller cells consist also an important source of pigment epithelium-derived factor, contributing in the regulation of retinal angiogenesis. In conditions of stress, Müller cells secrete significant amounts of VEGF, which result in an increase in vascular permeability and neovascularization.16 In the presence of inflammation, Müller cells swell, resulting in the formation of edema. This swelling has also been observed in inflammatory ME after surgery and is presumably derived by the presence of arachidonic acid and prostaglandin E2.17,18 The overall synthesis of potassium-rectifying channels (Kir) decreases also in the presence of inflammation. These functional alterations in Müller cells lead to the formation of cytotoxic ME and favor the formation of intracellular edema and accumulation of subretinal fluid, both characteristics of UME.19 This edema lacks leakage on the angiogram despite manifest edema on the optical coherence tomography (OCT) and is more commonly observed in older individuals, probably because there is a progressive loss of Kir channels with age and Müller cells are less able to excrete water and potassium ions.9 In inflammatory conditions, a vasogenic component coexists. Activated Müller cells and microglial cells synthesize VEGF together with pro-inflammatory cytokines and metalloproteases (such MMP-9) that lead to phosphorylation of occludin and VE-cadherin resulting in losing the integrity of the BRB, as desmosomes between capillary endothelial cells and between the cells of RPE are lost.13 The outer BRB is important for maintaining the adhesion between the RPE and photoreceptors. This is achieved by mechanisms of active transportation from trans-epithelial space to the extraretinal space. Inflammatory conditions that involve the choriocapillaris, choroid and sclera could damage the outer BRB and despite the healthy retinal capillary endothelium, a macular edema (ME) might occur.20,21 In uveitic ocular inflammation despite the inflammatory UME, other causes may increase also the macular thickness, such as: Inflammatory choroidal neovascularization Inflammatory epiretinal membrane (ERM) formation with associated vitreomacular traction Central serous chorioretinopathy exacerbated by steroid therapy Contiguity with papillary swelling.

Etiology of non-infectious UME

Non-infectious known causes of UME are: HLA-B27 positive uveitis (HLA-B27 associated diseases, including psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, inflammatory bowel disease, and reactive arthritis). A chronic AU, intermediate uveitis, a combination of anterior and intermediate uveitis may occur. AU can be also associated with hypopyon.22 Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). The most common form of uveitis is chronic AU, which is almost always asymptomatic in the initial stages. However, it can be sight-threatening due to complications, such as glaucoma, cataract, band keratopathy and UME.23 Sarcoidosis. Sarcoidosis-related uveitis is often bilateral and associated with numerous, whitish irregularly scattered granulomatous retinal and choroidal lesions.24 Multiple sclerosis (MS). MS patients have ten times higher prevalence of intermediate uveitis which is often associated with retinal vasculitis.25 Pars-planitis. An idiopathic chronic intermediate uveitis which can be associated with AU and retinal vasculitis.26 Adamantiades–Behçet’s disease. Uveitis is bilateral, often no simultaneous and no granulomatous with coexisting focal or multiple retinal lesions.27 Irvine–Gass syndrome and any postoperative ME. Even though the postoperative ME is not considered a typical UME, it should be included in the differential diagnosis of non-infectious UME as most of the time it is related with postoperative inflammation and uveitis.28 Onset is 4–12 weeks with a peak at 4–6 weeks postoperatively. Patients’ typical symptom is deterioration of vision after an initial period of improvement following surgery.29 Uveitis-glaucoma-hyphema syndrome is caused by mechanical trauma due to malpositioned intraocular lens over adjacent structures (iris, ciliary body, iridocorneal angle) and can lead to chronic inflammation, secondary iris neovascularization and ME.30 Drug-induced (or medically induced) uveitis. A number of medications; topical (metipranolol, glucocorticosteroids, brimonidine and prostaglandin analogs), periocular, intraocular (cidofovir, anti-VEGF agents [ranibizumab, bevacizumab, aflibercept] and triamcinolone acetonide), systemic (cidofovir, rifabutin, bisphosphonates, sulfonamides, tumor necrosis factor inhibitors [TNF-a], oral fluoroquinolones and diethylacarbamazine) and vaccines (bacille Calmette–Guérin, measles, mumps and rubella, hepatitis B and varicella) have been associated with uveitis. Mechanisms underlying drug-induced uveitis are unclear but it is suggested that both toxic and inflammatory reactions play a role.31,32 Other collagen diseases including systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), scleroderma, relapsing polychondritis, necrotizing vasculitis, granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) (formerly known as Wegener’s disease), rheumatoid arthritis, polyarthritis. Non-granulomatous mild AU may occur in SLE patients. However, severe sight-threatening retinal vasculitis with macular involvement is more frequent.33 Birdshot chorioretinopathy (BCR). BCR is strongly associated with HLA-A29 allele and it is believed to be T-cell driven. Typical manifestations include bilateral non- granulomatous uveitis with deep peripapillary or diffuse hypopigmented characteristic multiple cream-colored, irregular choroidal lesions.34 Sympathetic ophthalmia. It is a rare entity, typically presented as a bilateral, granulomatous panuveitis that occurs after surgery or ocular trauma to one eye threatening vision in the other eye.35 Intraocular tumor: primary non-hodgkin oculo-cerebral lymphoma. Typically, it presents as a chronic posterior uveitis with small whitish choroidal lesions, which is the most common masquerade. AU is unusual.36 Vogt–Koyanagi–Harada (VKH) disease. Ocular findings include severe bilateral, chronic granulomatous panuveitis with serous retinal detachment, optic disc swelling and hyalitis.37 Idiopathic uveitis. No cause/extraocular disease is identified. ME is the main reason for visual loss in patients with uveitis, causing a visual acuity (VA) drop below 20/40 in about 30% of patients with posterior uveitis. VA deteriorates in 45% of the patients with posterior uveitis, in 64% of panuveitis and 28% of intermediate uveitis of which the 28%, 59% and 85%, respectively, were complicated with ME. UME is more frequently found in panuveitis with an incidence of 66%.38 The systemic diseases associated with a poor visual prognosis are juvenile chronic arthritis and sarcoidosis.38

Epidemiology and prevalence of uveitis and UME

Most of the epidemiological data of uveitis have been studied in the developed world.39 The incidence and prevalence of uveitis is between 0.017–0.052% and 0.038–0.714%, respectively, in the population per year.2,3,40,41 Epidemiology changes with geographic location. AU prevalence is low in South Africa, posterior uveitis is more common in Africa, panuveitis is more common in Japan and in India panuveitis is more frequent than posterior uveitis.42–45 The prevalence of non-infectious uveitis has not been thoroughly studied separately from the prevalence of infectious uveitis. A recent original investigation carried out in the US made an effort to study the prevalence of non-infectious uveitis standalone.46 This study reports that non-infectious uveitis affected an estimated 298,801 adults (estimated prevalence 121/100,000) and 21,879 children (estimated prevalence 29/100,000) in the United States in 2015. AU prevalence was 98/100,000 representing the 81% of all non-infectious uveitis cases, followed by non-infectious panuveitis (prevalence 12/100,000), posterior uveitis (prevalence 10/100,000) and intermediate uveitis (prevalence 1/100,000). A smaller study of 927 patients in France studying severe sight-threatening uveitis found that 68% of the cases were non-infectious.47 However, this sample is not representative as it covers only severe cases. The prevalence mentioned below is the total prevalence of uveitis recorded, unless stated otherwise.

Anterior uveitis

The most common uveitis is AU with prevalence up to 90% of all the cases of uveitis in primary care and 50–60% in tertiary centers. HLA-B27 AU is the most common type of non-infectious uveitis in most of the developed countries (except Japan and Italy).48–50 AU is less frequent in areas with low prevalence of HLA-B27 such as India, South Africa, Japan and Korea.42,51,52 Seronegative spondyloarthropathies (ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, reactive arthritis and Reiter syndrome) are the most usual underlying cause of AU with a prevalence of 5% of all uveitis and 8–12% of acute AU.52–57 Analyzing further, the prevalence of uveitis in systemic autoimmune diseases: 2–9% of patients with inflammatory bowel disease, 7–16% of patients with psoriatic arthritis, 12–37% of patients with reactive arthritis and 20–40% of patients with ankylosing spondylitis will develop AU.48 ME is less common in AU compared to patients with intermediate uveitis, posterior uveitis or panuveitis.15,58,59 Approximately, 11% of patients with isolated AU and 60% of patients with JIA-associated uveitis will develop ME.60,61 The frequency of ME in patients with AU fluctuates between 9% and 28%.38,61–63

Intermediate uveitis

Intermediate uveitis is the least common type of uveitis (15% of all types).64 In most cases of intermediate uveitis, there is no underlying cause identified and they are classified as idiopathic (60–100%). Non-infectious diseases that cause intermediate uveitis include sarcoidosis, MS and intraocular lymphoma (masquerade syndrome).65,66 Despite the fact that intermediate uveitis is the least common type of uveitis, it is the form with the highest frequency of ME, fluctuating between 25% and 70%.38,61–63

Posterior uveitis

It is the second most common uveitis (15–30% of all cases).64 Non-infectious common etiologic factors include sarcoidosis, VKH disease and BCR.43 Sarcoidosis is responsible for 1–13% of uveitis cases in Western World.65,67 According to previous studies, ME rate in posterior uveitis is 19–34%.38,61–63

Panuveitis

The prevalence of panuveitis is greatly variable between geographic locations. It is less common in Europe and the USA and more frequent in Asia, Africa and South America.52,68,69 Japan has a high prevalence of panuveitis due to VKH, Adamantiades–Behçet disease and sarcoidosis.70 VKH panuveitis is rare in Europe with a prevalence of 0–3% and more common in Asia with a prevalence of 11–29%. Adamantiades–Behçet panuveitis has a higher prevalence in Asia and the Mediterranean region (15% in Portugal and 18% in Italy).51 The rate of ME in patients with panuveitis is 18–66%.38,61–63

ME in non-infectious uveitis

In non-infectious uveitis, ME is the most common complication, as it occurs in 8.3% of patients, followed by epiretinal membrane and glaucoma (6.3% and 4.2%, respectively).71 ME in HLA-B27 uveitis ranges between 2% and 32% of cases.72–77 According to a recent study from Turkey, ME in ankylosing spondylitis occurs in about 17.5% of patients and is more frequent in males than in females (18.9% vs 14.3%, respectively),78 while the rate of ME in JIA uveitis is 60%.60,61,79 ME in patients with intermediate uveitis occurs in 60% of cases approximately.61,80–83 The rate of ME in sarcoidosis is 27.3%, while in patients with Admantiades–Behçet’s disease it ranges from 15% to 63%.61,84–86 On the other hand, in BCR uveitis, ME rate is 100%.61

Diagnostic imaging in UME

Diagnosis is usually confirmed using imaging systems, mainly the OCT and fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA). Usually, a non-infectious UME presents with visual disturbances that are highly variable such as drop in near VA, metamorphopsia, micropsia, blurred vision and positive relative scotomas. In chronic cases where the outer retina has undergone degenerative structural changes, the visual effects can be significant. The gold standard technique for confirming the diagnosis of UME is the OCT.87,88

Optical coherence tomography (OCT)

OCT provides in vivo near-histological cross-sectional images of the retina. The layers of the retina can be visualized and a detailed analysis of the pathology affecting various structural layers can be done. Fluid accumulation can be detected in any layer. Furthermore, a quantification of macular thickness can be made, the outer/inner segment line of the photoreceptors can be visualized and examined, intraretinal or subretinal fluid can be seen as well as the presence of ERM or vitreomacular traction. OCT advantages are that it is a non-invasive, reproducible and sensitive imaging system.89,90

Fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA)

FFA despite being more invasive than OCT is a useful tool concerning the inflammatory ME. Dye diffusion can be usually detected in the macular area, which might be associated with pooling in the cystoid spaces. It can help in finding and staging the severity of intraocular inflammation, detecting active choroiditis/retinitis lesions and quantification of retinal vascular (venous, arterial or mixed) leakage. FFA can help to examine the status of macular vasculature which has a direct relationship with the visual morbidity and is the only imaging system that can reveal macular ischemia.87,91 The management of conditions such as posterior uveitis has been revolutionized with the newest ultra-wide field FFA.92,93 Furthermore, with the use of FFA the therapeutic response to a therapeutic intervention can be assessed. Representative cases with UME on OCT and FFA are depicted in Figures 1 and 2.
Figure 1

Macular 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 2

Macular edema secondary to UGH syndrome in a 60-year-old male patient (right eye).

Abbreviation: UGH, uveitis-glaucoma-hyphema.

Macular 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. Macular edema secondary to UGH syndrome in a 60-year-old male patient (right eye). Abbreviation: UGH, uveitis-glaucoma-hyphema.

Diagnostic management of UME

When uveitis-related ME is present, physicians need to rule out any infectious or autoimmune underlying disease. Initial survey should focus on personal medical and surgical history, previous ocular redness, trauma or ocular surgery. General signs should be researched (fever, sweating and weight loss) and then various organs including skin (herpetic eruption, aphtha, psoriasis or any previous cutaneous eruption or depigmentation), lung (asthma, breathlessness), digestive (abdominal pain, diarrhea, blood stools and hepatitis), joint pain, urinary tract (blood, ulceration) and nervous system (headache, dizziness, sensitive trouble, hypoacusia) should be assessed. Lifestyle should also be considered, ie alcohol, smoking, toxicomania, and risk of any sexually transmitted disease, presence of pets at home (cat scratch/Lyme disease), risk factors such as raw meat or badly washed salad (toxoplasmosis). A particular attention should be given to recent traveling and possible administration of immunotherapy, which cause a tremendous increase of ME incidence (ie, Fingolimod, Paclitaxel, Taxane).94 Slit lamp examination should focus on the presence of conjunctival injection, cells in the anterior chamber, the lens status and the presence of cells or floaters in the anterior vitreous. Fundus examination might reveal snowbanking in intermediate uveitis, white cells in the vitreous or inflammatory deposit along the vascular arcade. During the examination of the fundus, the acuteness or the chronicity of the disease might also be noticed. The presence of exudate will argue for a longstanding edema. The association with an optic nerve swelling could be a sign of worse visual prognosis and therefore should be addressed during the first consultation. Unfortunately, it does not contribute to the etiological orientation. Bilateral complete peripheral fundus examination is mandatory as it could reveal peripheral ischemia or inflammatory lesions. As mentioned above, OCT and especially spectral-domain OCT remains the most commonly used imaging technique to assess the patient. It is a useful tool as it allows follow-up. ME should be assessed on focusing on two points: the retinal thickness map and the presence of cyst in the retina. Normal range of central foveal thickness is 182 µm±23. Nevertheless as individual variation might happen, it is always good to have the contralateral eye scanned with OCT to allow comparison, especially in the absence of intraretinal cysts.95 FFA is very useful for the differential diagnosis of ME especially in the young diabetic patient where an ME might be associated with an almost normal appearance of the peripheral fundus, whereas the angiography will reveal extended zone of ischemia and microaneurysms’ leak responsible for the ME.96 Not every retinal leaking is associated with the presence of inflammatory disease and the angiography by its analysis of retinal vascularization is helpful. For example, the scarcity and irregularity of the macular vasculature of a degenerative macular telangiectasia type 2 seen on the FFA would be helpful for the differential diagnosis of other macular cystic degenerations. Finally, FFA could help to exclude a vascular etiology such as vascular occlusion by highlighting tortuous collaterals, delayed filling of vessels or tortuosity of vessels. Furthermore, FFA might show even late vascular leakage and be very useful in case where there are no intraretinal cysts and only a mild macular thickening is visible on the OCT. On the other hand, the absence of leakage with simultaneous presence of cyst should be suggestive of a different ME cause (ie, X-linked retinoschisis, Goldmann–Favre syndrome, nicotinic retinopathy, Iatrogenic cause such as nab-Paclitaxel, sirolimus).97,98 It is important to mention also that fundus autofluorescence can be helpful in revealing white dot syndromes.99 Once the correct diagnosis of ME is made and no obvious etiology such as Irvine–Gass exists, then blood tests are required. Some authors suggest that clinical examination might be sufficient to make a diagnosis of an underlying disease (lupus, Adamantiades–Behçet’s disease, cytomegalovirus (CMV)-related retinitis, VKH); nevertheless, one should always keep in mind that an accurate diagnosis is of outmost importance as a mistreatment might be harmful.100 The blood test should be tailored following the local incidence of infectious disease, taking into account possible previous patient’s trip and their phenotype (ie, Caucasians and HLA-B27, Mediterraneans and Adamantiades–Behçet disease, Asians and VKH).49 Classically, a blood test might include the following items: Electrolytes with renal and liver function, blood glucose, red cells count with platelets and inflammatory parameters Tailored infectious tests: syphilis, Lyme, cat scratch disease, HIV, herpes simplex virus and herpes zoster virus, CMV, Epstein–Barr virus, toxoplasmosis, human herpes virus-6 (HHV-6), tuberculosis (QuantiferonTB) , West Nile virus or other tropical diseases depending on patients trip or demography. Tailored immunologic tests: lysozyme, angiotensin converting enzyme, plasmatic protein electrophoresis, nuclear antibody (±anti-centromere, anti-dsDNA, anti-histone), ANCA, rheumatoid factor, complement C3, human leukocyte Antigen (HLA) B27, B51, A29. Radiological exams such as chest computed tomography for sarcoidosis, brain magnetic resonance imaging for lymphoma or positron emission tomography-computed tomography for vasculitis or sinus X-ray for GPA should be done following clinical examination results. Unfortunately, there are no standard screening tests. It is recommended to exclude the most common infectious causes and especially syphilis as an inadequate immunosuppressive treatment in those patients might have dramatic consequences.101 Also, it is highly recommended to rule out sarcoidosis as it may take various clinical appearances.102 More invasively, in case of unexplained UME, even with a complete clinical and laboratory workup, an anterior chamber tap and a vitreous biopsy might be necessary.103,104 Classically, a high CD4/CD8 ratio will argue for sarcoidosis (sensitivity and specificity up to 100% and 96%, respectively), whereas a high CD8 count and the presence of viral DNA will argue for a viral infection.105 Analysis of CD19 could be helpful to rule out a tumoral etiology.106 Sometimes an intraocular lymphoma might mimic a UME thus ratio of IL-10/IL-6>1 in the aqueous humor will be highly suggestive of this cause.107

Therapeutic management

Infectious UME should be treated with the appropriate etiological treatment. Herein, we will focus on the various UME of non-infectious causes. An accurate initial diagnosis of ME etiology is of outmost importance, as even with the right treatment, a possible resistance to it might raise doubts over whether the initial investigations were not properly done.

Irvine–Gass syndrome or pseudophakic ME or postoperative ME

The treatment nowadays is mainly based on the prevention of its occurrence. The European Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons has largely modified their recommendations following PREMED studies.108,109 Topical steroidal and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drops have clearly led to a drop of the incidence of ME. Principle of action is mainly related to the decrease of postoperative blood-aqueous barrier breakdown.110 In case of occurrence of ME, despite topical prevention, it is recommended to associate topical steroids and non-steroids anti-inflammatory drops with oral or topical carbonic anhydrase inhibitors usually for a couple of months. Vitrectomy and grid macular laser were used with some success before the introduction of anti-VEGF injections and intravitreal steroid implants.111,112 Periocular steroid injections remain the first-line treatment after failure of topical or oral therapy, followed by intravitreal anti-VEGF agents, like ranibizumab and bevacizumab, or intravitreal steroids as intravitreal administration of triamcinolone was found to be more efficient compared to periocular administration.113,114 One injection might be sufficient with low recurrence rate but for severe cases, repeated injections are often necessary.115,116 Third-line treatment usually consists of intraocular implants. However, physicians should be cautious with this therapeutic option as there is a risk of ocular hypertension and/or migration of the implant in the anterior chamber which can lead to endothelial cells damage.117–119 In a recent study from France, Ozurdex implant improved VA by at least 15 EDTRS letters, while half of the patients did not need a second injection within the first year.120 In some cases, a combination of the above therapies might be considered (ie, intravitreal anti-VEGF and steroids with topical NSAIDs).121 Rarely, in case of refractory ME in presence of an iris-fixated intraocular lens, even with a previous complete vitrectomy, extraction of the lens and replacement with a scleral-fixated lens might be necessary to resolve the ME.122 Over the last decade, some new therapeutical perspectives are coming out such as oral mineralocorticoid-receptor antagonists or subcutaneous interferon-alpha.123,124 Health care professional’s decision about the most appropriate treatment should be made taking into account patient’s health, comfort and safety profile.

ME related to corneal grafts

MΕ following penetrating keratoplasty is a common complication but recently with the development of new endothelial grafting techniques (Descemet’s stripping endothelial automated keratoplasty and Descemet’s membrane endothelial keratoplasty), which are supposed to be less invasive, their incidence has increased.125,126 Keratoplasty-related ME, usually, resolves spontaneously or with topical anti-inflammatory treatment alone, within a few weeks, without affecting the final visual outcome of patients.125–127

ME related to immunological diseases

This kind of ME can be caused by entities, such as Adamantiades–Behçet’s disease, Sarcoidosis, HLA-B27 spondyloarthritis, VKH, JIA and inflammatory bowel disease. Initial treatment remains oral and topical steroid and non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs. In case of unilateral ME, periocular use of steroids is indicated, whereas in bilateral form, systemic steroids are usually preferred. Immunomodulatory treatment such as methotrexate (a folic acid analog which inhibits leukocyte division),128 tacrolimus and sirolimus (macrolides which inhibit T lymphocyte),129 azathioprine (a purine analog which reduces the peripheral T and B lymphocytes and downregulates interleukin-2 synthesis and IgM production),130 mycophenolate mofetil (an inhibitor of the purine synthesis pathway),131 cyclosporine (which is produced from the fungus Tolipocladium inflatum and inhibits T-cells),132 and Type I interferons (cytokines which play an important role in the regulation of innate and adaptive immune response and in the stabilization of the BRB)133,134 were introduced with the hope that they would be more efficient and reduce the side effects of steroids.135–138 Those corticosteroid-sparing agents are of outmost importance for chronic diseases, nevertheless immunomodulatory treatment has also side effects such as nephrotoxicity, neurotoxicity, gastrointestinal disturbances, flu-like syndrome, leucopenia, thrombocytopenia, hypercholesterolemia, hyperglycemia, potentially increased risk of non-hodgkin lymphoma, and requires frequent clinical observation and lab tests (renal and liver function tests, glucose and lipids profile, full blood count).138 Unfortunately, there is no clear evidence for a standardized protocol and, therefore, the choice of the molecule will depend on the physician’s experience and the patient’s state.139,140 In case of failure (due to ineffectiveness or side effects), the more recent anti-TNF alpha treatment can be used as first line or rescue treatment (etanercept, infliximab, adalimumab) as the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-alpha was found to be involved in the pathogenesis of non-infectious uveitis.141–149 Infliximab (a mouse-human chimeric IgG1 monoclonal antibody against TNF-alpha, administered intravenously) and adalimumab (a human IgG1 monoclonal antibody against TNF-alpha administered subcutaneously) have proven their efficiency to reduce steroids dependence even in cases refractory to standard immunosuppressive therapy for sarcoidosis, whereas etanercept seems to be less effective than Infliximab for ocular inflammations.150,151 Systemic administration of anti TNF-alpha agents has been linked with serious adverse events, including malignancies, infections (ie tuberculosis) and autoimmune diseases.152 Intravitreal administration of methotrexate can also be considered according to a British study published in 2009, but this was reported prior to the arrival of the new immunomodulatory agents.153 In cases of persisting UME to conventional pharmacological treatment, pars plana vitrectomy (with or without internal limiting membrane peeling) may be indicated.154 Although the mechanism of UME regression following surgical intervention is not fully understood, there is some evidence that reduction of inflammatory mediators in the vitreous body leads to reduction of antigen presentation.155

ME related to ocular diseases

Retinitis pigmentosa might be associated with uveitis and ME at any stage of the disease.156,157 The pathophysiology of this edema is poorly understood, it might be related to inflammatory reaction due to autoantibodies and abnormal vascular permeability.158 Topical or systemic carbonic anhydrase inhibitors are used as first-line treatment and in case of resistance intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide has shown good results.159,160 Birdshot retinopathy usually responds to systemic steroids, but sometimes resistance even to immunosuppressive agents might threaten the visual outcome.161 More recent anti-TNF alpha agents can be good alternative therapeutic options in those situations.162 However, even these anti -TNF alpha agents might fail to achieve a resolution of ME. Recently, Leclercq et al reported the effectiveness of tocilizumab in refractory birdshot UME cases.163

Medically induced ME

Taxane-induced ME often needs withdrawal of treatment as topical dorzolamide has little effectiveness and anti-VEGF agents do not seem to have better results.164 ME in this condition is probably related to aquaporin interaction rather than inflammatory reactions.165 This might explain the reason that only the first injection of subconjunctival triamcinolone is effective, whereas the second one does not seem to be beneficial.166 Fingolimod, commonly used nowadays in MS, has the particularity to induce ME usually a few months after initiation in approximately 0.5% of patients.167,168 Withdrawal of treatment is not always necessary, as steroid or non-steroid treatment can be effective with continued Fingolimod use.169,170 Patients with UME should be monitored closely initially. It is important to examine them 4–6 weeks after steroid treatment initiation to check intraocular pressure and the effectiveness of the treatment. A collaborative follow-up with a rheumatologist or immunologist is recommended in case of auto-immune disease. OCT monitoring and angiography should be repeated in conjunction with a regular VA assessment and complete slit lamp examination. A summary of the most important studies and the algorithm involving the treatment of non-infectious UME is depicted in Table 3 and Figure 3, respectively.
Table 3

Non-infectious UME. Summary of the most important studies

StudyDesignNumber of patients/eyesKey results
Vallet et al145 (2016)Multicenter,observational,infliximab vs adalimumab160 patients1. Mean response to treatment: 90%2. Mean complete response: 27%3. Median time to response: 2 months4. Rate of serious adverse events: 13%5. Both treatment are equivalent
Diaz-Llopis et al146 (2012)Prospective case seriesadalimumab in refractory uveitis39 JIA, 16 pars planitis, 13 Adamantiades –Behçet131 patients1. Mean visual acuity at baseline: 0.38±0.44 logMAR improved to 0.26±0.39 logMAR at month 6.2. Mean macular thickness reduction from 296.95 μm±102 to 240.11 μm±36.13. 40 patients had clear visible cystic changes initially4. 28 of these 40 patient had complete regression of Cystoid ME5. Improvement of macular edema was significantly correlated with visual acuity
Arida et al144 (2011)Meta-analysisinfliximab and Adamantiades–Behçet’s disease369 patients1. 89% response to infliximab vs 60% etanercept (ten patients)2. 65% complete response3.Combination of cyclosporine A and/or azathioprine seem to have better outcome than Infliximab alone
Calvo-Rio et al147 (2011)Multicenter,anti-TNF-alpha and Adamantiades–Behçet disease124 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 al148 (2018)Retrospective: tocilizumabfor refractory uveitic macular edema (non-infectious)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 al149 (2016)Open-label, multicenter study.Golimumab for spondyloarthritis-related uveitis15 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 al162 (2016)Multicenter, multinational Phase III study, adalimumab in non-infectious uveitis110 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 Group114(2019)Multicenter, randomized clinical trial192 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 3

Treatment 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.

Non-infectious UME. Summary of the most important studies 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% 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 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 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 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. Treatment 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.

Prognosis

Uveitis-related ME is considered as a risk factor for severe vision loss.171 The prognosis depends on the etiology of the uveitis and also the severity of the ocular inflammation and the activity of the potentially coexisting systemic disease,172 for example a UME secondary to Adamantiades–Behçet disease will have a poorer prognosis compared to a sarcoidosis related UME. The location of the inflammation and the type of the lesion are also important prognostic factors; for example, coexisting vitreoretinal interface alterations and posterior location of the uveitis are bad prognostic factors.173 The prognosis of pediatric UME has drastically improved over the last decades despite its chronicity and legal blindness decreased by more than 50% with a strict control of the inflammation.174,175 These data highlight the significance and the need for aggressive treatment such as long-lasting intravitreal steroids.176

Impact of UME on VA and quality of life

Regardless of its cause, ME leads to reduced VA which can affect patients’ quality of life.177 Lardenoye et al in a cross-sectional study reported that 43% of patients with UME presented significant visual loss (≤20/60). Factors associated with poor vision were advanced age of the patients, chronic inflammation, and specific uveitis entities with intraocular lymphoma and BCR having the worse visual prognosis among the non-infectious causes, while HLA-B27-related uveitis, sarcoidosis and Adamantiades–Behçet disease seem to have lower proportions of impaired vision secondary to ME.61 The same group had previously demonstrated that 35% of patients with uveitis experienced significant visual reduction.38 In a large retrospective study conducted by Durrani et al, VA <6/18 was found in 47% of patients with UME (27% due to UME alone and 20% UME combined with cataract).178 Taylor et al, in a retrospective study, observed that UME was associated with reduced overall visual field sensitivity, while eyes with cystoid UME had VA almost four lines worse compared to eyes without cystoid UME.179 The proportion of eyes with vision <20/40 was 70% when cystoid UME was present vs 30% in eyes without cystoid UME. In a more recent retrospective study in a pediatric population with JIA, it was found that the impact on vision was more significant when both macular thickening and cysts were present, and that the central macular thickness was correlated with VA, but not with disease activity.60 Systemic treatment for UME is associated with systemic adverse events, such as diabetes, osteoporosis and hypertension affecting the quality of life of these patients. Systemic immunomodulatory treatment is also associated with significant adverse events, such as skin reaction, renal and liver dysfunction.137 On the other hand, local ocular administration of steroids has a high risk of inducing ocular complications. Up to 40% of patients might need surgery to control IOP whereas this rate remains at <10% in case of systemic steroids.180

Conclusion

ME is a common, sight-threatening complication of non-infectious uveitis and can persist or recur despite improvement or resolution of the ocular inflammation. The diagnostic and therapeutic management of non-infectious UME remains one of the biggest challenges in ophthalmology. New pharmaceutical agents such as ACTHAR gel (a repository adrenocorticotropic hormone injection for the treatment of sarcoidosis),181 the selective janus kinase 1 inhibitor filgotinib (for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis and possibly for active non-infectious uveitis)182,183 and ustekinumab (a monoclonal antibody targeting the p40 subunit of interleukin-12 and interleukin-23 which can be a safe therapeutic option for psoriatic arthritis and Crohn’s disease)184,185 are expected with great interest. Moreover, the role of vitrectomy with or without peeling of the internal limiting membrane should be studied deeper, as the mechanism of UME improvement after vitrectomy is still unclear.183
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Authors:  Alexandre Matet; Alejandra Daruich; Francine Behar-Cohen
Journal:  Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging Retina       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 1.300

2.  Taxane Induced Cystoid Macular Edema: Case Report and Integrated Pathogenic Theory.

Authors:  M Kanakis; I Georgalas; T Makatsoris; N Pharmakakis
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3.  Choroidal white lesions as an early manifestation of sarcoidosis.

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Review 4.  [Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease].

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Journal:  J Fr Ophtalmol       Date:  2017-06-01       Impact factor: 0.818

5.  Cystoid macular edema following penetrating keratoplasty: incidence and prognosis.

Authors:  V S Nirankari; J W Karesh
Journal:  Ophthalmic Surg       Date:  1986-07

6.  Differential expression of Kir4.1 and aquaporin 4 in the retina from endotoxin-induced uveitis rat.

Authors:  Xiao-Qiang Liu; Hideyuki Kobayashi; Zi-Bing Jin; Akihiko Wada; Nobuhis Nao-I
Journal:  Mol Vis       Date:  2007-03-01       Impact factor: 2.367

7.  Changing patterns of intraocular inflammatory disease in Japan.

Authors:  Toshiko Wakabayashi; Yoshihiro Morimura; Yuko Miyamoto; Annabelle A Okada
Journal:  Ocul Immunol Inflamm       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 3.070

8.  Outcomes of HLA-B27-positive and HLA-B27-negative acute anterior uveitis.

Authors:  A Linssen; C Meenken
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  1995-09       Impact factor: 5.258

Review 9.  Standardization of uveitis nomenclature for reporting clinical data. Results of the First International Workshop.

Authors:  Douglas A Jabs; Robert B Nussenblatt; James T Rosenbaum
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 5.258

10.  COSUMO: study protocol for the development of a core outcome set for efficacy and effectiveness trials in posterior segment-involving uveitis.

Authors:  Mohammad O Tallouzi; Jonathan M Mathers; David J Moore; Philip I Murray; Nicholas Bucknall; Jane M Blazeby; Melanie Calvert; Alastair K Denniston
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 2.279

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1.  Triamcinolone acetonide injectable suspension for suprachoroidal use in the treatment of macular edema associated with uveitis.

Authors:  Joanne Thomas; Lucas Kim; Thomas Albini; Steven Yeh
Journal:  Expert Rev Ophthalmol       Date:  2022-08-21

2.  Increased vitreous levels of B cell activation factor (BAFF) and soluble interleukin-6 receptor in patients with macular edema due to uveitis related to Behçet's disease and sarcoidosis.

Authors:  Atsunobu Takeda; Eiichi Hasegawa; Nobuyo Yawata; Shoji Notomi; Keijiro Ishikawa; Yusuke Murakami; Toshio Hisatomi; Kazuhiro Kimura; Koh-Hei Sonoda
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 3.535

3.  Ciclosporin A in bilateral auto-immune chronic posterior uveitis associated with macular oedema: a Long-term Observational Safety and Efficacy Study.

Authors:  Munirah Alafaleq; Romain Freund; Marie-Aude Penet; Christine Fardeau; Corinne Isnard-Bagnis; Sophie Tezenas du Montcel; Gilbert Deray; Phuc LE Hoang; Bahram Bodaghi; Isabelle Tostivint
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2021-10-30       Impact factor: 4.456

4.  Suprachoroidal Injection of Triamcinolone- Review of a Novel Treatment for Macular Edema Caused by Noninfectious Uveitis.

Authors:  Kenneth W Price; Thomas A Albini; Steven Yeh
Journal:  US Ophthalmic Rev       Date:  2020-12-23

5.  Clinical outcomes of pediatric macular edema associated with non-infectious uveitis.

Authors:  Anh Hong Nguyen; Bethlehem Mekonnen; Eric Kim; Nisha R Acharya
Journal:  J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect       Date:  2021-03-15

6.  Healthcare costs among patients with macular oedema associated with non-infectious uveitis: a US commercial payer's perspective.

Authors:  Seenu M Hariprasad; George Joseph; Patrick Gagnon-Sanschagrin; Elizabeth Serra; Subrata Bhattacharyya; Jérôme Bédard; Annie Guérin; Thomas Arno Albini
Journal:  BMJ Open Ophthalmol       Date:  2021-11-10

Review 7.  Sarcoid Uveitis: An Intriguing Challenger.

Authors:  Pia Allegri; Sara Olivari; Federico Rissotto; Roberta Rissotto
Journal:  Medicina (Kaunas)       Date:  2022-07-04       Impact factor: 2.948

  7 in total

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