| Literature DB >> 32962748 |
D Thorel1,2, S Ingen-Housz-Oro3,4,5, G Royer2,6, A Delcampe1,2, N Bellon2,7, C Bodemer2,7, A Welfringer-Morin2,7, D Bremond-Gignac2,8, M P Robert2,8, M Tauber2,9, F Malecaze2,10, O Dereure2,11, V Daien2,12, A Colin2,13, C Bernier2,14, C Couret2,15, B Vabres2,15, F Tetart2,16, B Milpied2,17, T Cornut2,18, B Ben Said2,19, C Burillon2,20, N Cordel2,21, L Beral2,22, N de Prost2,23, P Wolkenstein2,13, M Muraine1,2, J Gueudry1,2.
Abstract
Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) can lead to severe ophthalmologic sequelae. The main risk factor is the severity of the initial ocular involvement. There are no recommendations for ocular management during acute phase.We conducted a national audit of current practice in the 11 sites of the French reference center for toxic bullous dermatoses and a review of the literature to establish therapeutic consensus guidelines. We sent a questionnaire on ocular management practices in SJS/ TEN during acute phase to ophthalmologists and dermatologists. The survey focused on ophthalmologist opinion, pseudomembrane removal, topical ocular treatment (i.e. corticosteroids, antibiotics, antiseptics, artificial tear eye drops, vitamin A ointment application), amniotic membrane transplantation, symblepharon ring use, and systemic corticosteroid therapy for ophthalmologic indication. Nine of 11 centers responded. All requested prompt ophthalmologist consultation. The majority performed pseudomembrane removal, used artificial tears, and vitamin A ointment (8/9, 90%). Combined antibiotic-corticosteroid or corticosteroid eye drops were used in 6 centers (67%), antibiotics alone and antiseptics in 3 centers (33%). Symblepharon ring was used in 5 centers (55%) if necessary. Amniotic membrane transplantation was never performed systematically and only according to the clinical course. Systemic corticosteroid therapy was occasionally used (3/9, 33%) and discussed on a case-by-case basis.The literature about ocular management practice in SJS/ TEN during acute phase is relatively poor. The role of specific treatments such as local or systemic corticosteroid therapy is not consensual. The use of preservatives, often present in eye drops and deleterious to the ocular surface, is to be restricted. Early amniotic membrane transplantation seems to be promising.Entities:
Keywords: Drug reaction; Eye; Lyell syndrome; Management; Ocular involvement; Stevens-Johnson syndrome; Toxic epidermal necrolysis; Treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32962748 PMCID: PMC7510143 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-020-01538-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Audit of current ocular management during acute phase of SJS/Lyell in the 11 sites of the French reference center for toxic bullous dermatoses
| 9 answers, n/9 (%) | |
|---|---|
| 2 (22) | |
| 8 (90) | |
| Corticosteroid/combined antibio-corticosteroid | 6 (67) |
| Antiseptic/antibiotic alone | 3 (33) |
| Artificial tears | 8 (90) |
| 8 (90) | |
| 3 (33) | |
| 5 (55) | |
| 9 (100) | |
Literature review focus on ocular management during acute phase of SJS/Lyell
| Treatments | Author/article [Ref] | Year/country | Study methodology | Number patients (n) | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Topical corticosteroid therapy | Sotozono et al. [ | 2009/ Japan | Retrospective controlled | 94 | Improvement of visual prognosis |
| Topical antibiotics | Yip et al. [ | 2007/ Singapore | Retrospective | 117 | Increased risk of ocular complications |
| Antibiotics/corticosteroids/antiseptics | Gueudry et al. [ | 2009/ France | Retrospective | 159 | No impact on ocular complications |
| Systemic corticosteroid therapy | Power et al. [ | 1995/USA | Retrospective controlled | 366 | At 3 months, no significant difference in ocular involvement |
| IV-Ig | Yip et al. [ | 2005/Singapore | Retrospective controlled | 10 | No significant difference in ocular complications between patients treated with 2-day IV-Ig (2 g/kg) |
| IV-Ig | Kim et al. [ | 2013/Korea | Retrospective comparative multicentric | 51 | An early high-dose IV-Ig or systemic steroid could improve VA on the long term |
| Systemic and topical corticosteroid therapy | Araki et al. [ | 2009/Japan | Observational prospective | 5 | No late ocular complications in patients treated with corticosteroid pulse (500 mg - 1 g for 3 days) + topical corticosteroid |
| Systemic corticosteroid/ IV-Ig/ combined corticosteroid IV-Ig therapy/ supportive care only (combined antibio-corticosteroid eye drops, artificial tears) | Kim et al. [ | 2015/Korea | Retrospective multicentric comparative | 43 | No significant difference between groups of patients treated with IV-Ig or systemic steroid or supportive care |
| AMT | Sharma et al. [ | 2016/India | Randomised controlled trial | 50 | Improvement of tear film break up time, visual acuity, Schirmer’s test, and reduction of conjunctival inflammation at 6 months |
| AMT/Self-retained AMT | Gregory [ | 2011/USA | Observational prospective non-controlled | 10 | Decreased palpebral inflammation and symblepharon formation, lower incidence of late ocular complications at 6 months in patients treated with AMT or self-retained AMT |
| AMT/Self-retained AMT | Shanbhag et al. [ | 2019/USA | Controlled retrospective observational | 48 | Reduced ocular complications and improved final VA in patients with early AMT or self-retained AMT |
| AMT | Gregory [ | 2016/USA | Observational prospective non-controlled | 79 | Improvement of VA and decreased dry eye symptoms or scarring sequelae |
| AMT | Shammas et al. [ | 2010/USA | Observational retrospective | 6 | Acute phase AMT combined with topical corticosteroids resulted in better VA and ocular surface preservation |
AMT amniotic membrane transplantation; IV-Ig intravenous immunoglobulins; VA visual acuity
Fig. 1Diagnostic evaluation of acute-phase ocular involvement
Fig. 2Acute-phase ocular management proposition in patients with Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis