| Literature DB >> 34476773 |
Jurgen Sota1, Matteo-Maria Girolamo2, Bruno Frediani1, Gian Marco Tosi2, Luca Cantarini3, Claudia Fabiani2.
Abstract
Scleritis refers to a wide spectrum of ocular conditions ranging from mild to sight-threatening scleral inflammation that may compromise visual function and threaten the anatomical integrity of the ocular globe. Most aggressive forms like necrotizing or posterior scleritis are often difficult-to-treat cases, refractory to conventional treatment. The association with systemic diseases, namely rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren syndrome, granulomatosis with polyangiitis, and relapsing polychondritis, may have prognostic implications as well. A better understanding of the pathogenesis of ocular inflammatory diseases have paved the way to more effective and targeted treatment approaches. In this regard, a growing body of evidence supports the potential role of biologic agents in the management of non-infectious scleral inflammation, either idiopathic or in a background of immune-mediated systemic disorders. Biologic agents such as anti-tumor necrosis factor agents, interleukin-1 and interleukin-6 inhibitors as well as CD20 blockade have displayed promising results. More specifically, several studies have reported their ability to control scleral inflammation, reduce the overall scleritis relapses, and allow a glucocorticoid-sparing effect while being generally well tolerated. Anecdotal reports have also been described with other biologic agents including abatacept, ustekinumab, daclizumab, and alemtuzumab as well as targeted small molecules such as tofacitinib. Further studies are warranted to fully elucidate the role of biologic agents in non-infectious scleritis and investigate specific areas with the aim to administer treatments in the context of personalized medicine. This review summarizes the available data regarding clinical trials, small pilot studies, and real-life experience of the last two decades reporting the use of biologic agents in the management of non-infectious scleritis.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-tumor necrosis factor; Biologic agents; Interleukin-1 inhibitors; Rituximab; Scleritis; Tocilizumab
Year: 2021 PMID: 34476773 PMCID: PMC8589879 DOI: 10.1007/s40123-021-00393-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmol Ther
Anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy in the treatment of non-infectious scleritis
| First author, year reference | Study design | Biologic agent | N° | Type of scleritis | Systemic disease | Results | Safety profile | Mean follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sadhu, 2020 [ | CS | ADA | 3 | Diffuse AS ( NAS ( | RA ( Idiopathic ( | Clinical response, GC-sparing effect | NR | 18.5 |
| Khalili, 2020 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | PS + anterior uveitis | Idiopathic | Successful control of inflammation. Improvement in visual acuity. Remission on 4 years. Mild relapse 6 months after IFX cessation responsive to ibuprofen 400 mg 3 times daily | NR | 60 on IFX. 108 in total |
| Fabiani, 2020 [ | RS | ADA ( IFX ( GOL ( | 19 | AS | RA ( | Significant reduction in scleritis grading and ocular relapses Significant GC-sparing effect and stable BCVA Good drug retention rate (almost 60% at 12-month follow-up and an estimated 52% at 36-month follow-up) | Severe urticaria ( | 18 |
| Amer, 2020 [ | CR | GOL | 1 | Necrotizing PS | PsA | No disease progression or evidence of association AU or PU or CME | NR | 72 (24 on GOL) |
| Iwahashi, 2019 [ | CS | IFX | 2 | AS ( AS + PS ( | RA | Clinical improvement. Treatment discontinuation due to paradoxical ocular AE One patient switched to tocilizumab with complete resolution of scleritis and macular edema | Macular edema and vitreous opacity ( Exacerbation of PS, dense vitritis and serous retinal detachment ( | 4.5 |
| Dutta Majumder, 2019 [ | CR | GOL | 1 | NAS | Idiopathic | Proper control of scleritis allowing the insertion of Ahmed glaucoma valve | NR | – |
| Durrani, 2017 [ | RS | ADA | 9 | NS scleritis | NR | Resolution of inflammation in 47% of the eyes with recalcitrant disease and treated with multiple immunosuppressants. GC-sparing effect Cystoid macular edema resolved in 3/4 eyes Discontinuation in 4 patients due to ineffectiveness | Skin reaction ( | 31.2 |
| Lawuyi, 2016 [ | CS | ADA | 2 | NAS ( | RA ( Idiopathic ( | Clinical resolution and control of scleral necrosis | Gastroenteritis ( | 7.5 |
| Sainz-de-la-Maza, 2016 [ | CS | IFX ( ADA ( CZP ( ETN ( | 13 | Diffuse AS ( NAS ( | RP | IFX and ADA were effective in 1 and 2 patients, respectively. Two patients developed scleritis after IFX therapy and 1 of them was administered ADA and ETN without success. Finally CZP pegol was given, with no further relapses of scleritis | 2 paradoxical scleritis reactions under IFX | 21 |
| Akhtar, 2015 [ | CR | ADA | 1 | AS | Takayasu arteritis | Marked improvement of scleritis, GC-sparing effect | NR | 18 |
| Ragam, 2014 [ | RS | ADA ( | 17 | Non-necrotizing scleritis | RA ( RA + CD ( RA + GD ( GD ( CD ( | Control of active inflammation for at least 2 months was achieved in 88% of patients. Five (29%) patients ended up switching from one TNFα inhibitor to another Stable visual acuity. No significant differences between ADA and IFX | Allergic reaction to a single infusion of IFX ( on ADA treatment ( | 25.8 |
| Hata, 2012 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | Nodular scleritis with superficial punctate keratitis | RA | Scleritis and infiltrative keratitis completely improved. No reoccurrence of ocular disease | No side effects | NR |
| Sassa, 2012 [ | CR | ETN | 1 | NS scleritis | RA | Development of scleritis 1 month after ETN reintroduction and reoccurrence during rechallenge. Clinical resolution upon switch to IFX | Paradoxical scleritis after ETN therapy | 100 on ETN, 12 on IFX |
| Gaujoux-Viala, 2012 [ | CS | ETN | 3 | AS with uveitis ( NAS ( | RA | Rapid remission after ETN discontinuation. One patient experienced a dechallenge-rechallenge phenomenon | Paradoxical scleritis after ETN therapy | 25.7 |
| Tlucek, 2020 [ | CR | CZP pegol | 1 | NS scleritis | RA | Resolution both symptomatically and on ophthalmological examination | NR | 5 |
| Bawazeer, 2011 [ | CR | ADA | 1 | Nodular AS | Idiopathic | Rapid control of scleritis within 3 months after failure of IFX, GC-sparing effect | No side effects | 60 (24 on ADA) |
| Oh, 2011 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | AS + PS + PUK | Juvenile RA | After the third IFX infusion, the corneal ulceration stopped, and conjunctival hyperemia and ocular discomfort were relieved. Systemic immunosuppression tapered after 3 months | NR | 12 |
| Doctor, 2010 [ | CS/RS | IFX | 10 | Diffuse AS ( Nodular AS ( Sclerouveitis ( CME ( | Idiopathic ( RA ( CD ( RA + CD ( BS ( | Favorable response in 90% of the patients, with 6 of them achieving remission and cessation of concomitant immunosuppression. Monthly infusions may be required to maintain remission | Drug-induced lupus ( Streptococcal upper respiratory infections ( Herpes zoster ( | 16.8 |
| Restrepo, 2010 [ | CR | ADA | 1 | Nodular AS | RA | Control of ocular and extraocular manifestations at 3-month follow-up | 6 | |
| Jabbarvand, 2010 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | NAS + PUK | RP | Complete remission | NR | 12 |
| Kontkanen, 2010 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | NSA | GPA | Rapid clinical response. Improvement in visual acuity | NR | 24 |
| Abalos Medina, 2010 [ | CS | IFX | 1 | NAS | RA | Rapid clinical improvement, resolution of symptoms after the 3rd IFX infusion | NR | 4 |
| Herrera-Esparza, 2009 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | AS | RA | Clinical improvement 2 weeks following the first IFX infusion | No side effects | 24 |
| Sen, 2009 [ | CT | IFX | 5 | AS | HLA-B27 scleritis ( GPA ( Cogan’s syndrome ( Idiopathic ( | All patients achieved control of active scleritis within 14 weeks. One patient with GPA developed new-onset intraocular inflammation after 14 weeks. Clinical resolution in 4 out of 5 | Ear infection with transient decreased hearing, UTI, lower RTI, and facial rash ( UTI, diarrhea, upper RTI, nasal congestion and headache, mouth sores, head tremor, occasional numbness and tingling in extremities ( | 10.8 |
| Ahn, 2009 [ | CS | IFX | 3 | NAS | Idiopathic | Clinical resolution, choroidal and retinal detachment subsided | No complication observed | 16 |
| Lopez-Gonzalez, 2009 [ | CS | IFX | 1 | Necrotizing scleritis | Idiopathic | Clinical response. Inactivity of posterior pole. GC-sparing effect. Preserved visual acuity | No AE | 2.5 |
| Le Garrec, 2009 [ | CS | ETN | 2 | Nodular AS | RA | Development of nodular AS in 2 patients, 17 months and 12 months after ETN initiation, respectively | Paradoxical nodular AS ( | 14.5 |
| Huynh, 2008 [ | CS | ADA ( | 3 | NS scleritis | RA ( Psoriasis ( | Clinical response, reduction in inflammatory grade | No significant clinical or laboratory AE | 8.5 |
| Culver, 2008 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | PS + orbital miositis | CD | IFX had a partial efficacy on ocular disease and no impact on intestinal symptoms. Two months after cyclophosphamide infusions the patient had a recurrence and was treated with ADA with no further relapses | NR | Roughly 10 |
| Morley, 2008 [ | CS | IFX | 1 | NAS | Surgically induced necrotizing scleritis | IFX discontinuation after the 3rd infusion due to general malaise. Lesion resolved 1 month after IFX cessation | General malaise after 3rd infusion | 2.5 |
| Weiss, 2007 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | PS + papillitis | Idiopathic | Clinical relief in 10 days following the first IFX infusion. Reduction of scleral swelling on B-mode ultrasound examination and regression of papillitis at fundoscopy. Complete remission at 4 months | No side effects | 16 |
| Sobrin, 2007 [ | RS | IFX | 10 | NS scleritis ( Nodular scleritis ( Scleritis + anterior uveitis ( Scleritis + panuveitis ( | RA ( CD ( RP ( Reactive arthritis ( Ankylosing spondylitis ( Idiopathic ( | Nine out of 10 patient were classified as responders and 1 as partial responder requiring alkylating agent therapy. Five patients were able to reduce their concurrent immunosuppressive therapy. Three patients were able to remain relapse-free while not taking any medication | Lupus-like reaction causing treatment withdrawal ( | 20 |
| Atchia, 2006 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | NAS + PUK | RA | Dramatic improvement after the first IFX infusion | NR | 5 |
| Galor, 2006 [ | RS | 22 patients with uveitis and scleritis IFX ( ETN ( | 4 | AS ( NAS ( | RA ( RP ( | Two patients developed their first episode of anterior scleritis 8 and 31 months after ETN treatment | Paradoxical AS ( | – |
| El-Shabrawi, 2005 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | NAS + PUK, anterior uveitis | GPA | Clinical improvement, drug-sparing effect, visual acuity improvement | Acute herpes zoster infection | 13 |
| Ashok, 2005 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | NAS + PUK | RA | Dramatic response after three infusions of IFX. Improvement of visual acuity. Relapse upon reduction of prednisolone at 12.5 mg daily. Clinical resolution after increased dosages from 3 mg/kg to 5 mg/kg of IFX | NR | 24 |
| Cazabon, 2005 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | Diffuse AS | RP | Clinical resolution of ocular and systemic manifestations | No AE reported | 6 |
| Díaz-Valle, 2004 [ | CR | IFX | 1 | Diffuse AS | RA | Clinical improvement after the 2nd infusion of IFX. Resolution after 3rd infusion | NR | 6 |
| Murphy, 2004 [ | CS | IFX | 4 | NS scleritis ( NAS + PUK ( | RA ( pANCA renal vasculitis ( Idiopathic ( | Three out of 4 patients achieved remission. One patient showed a partial response but treatment was withdrawn. Repeated infusions were required to maintain remission | Infusion-related reaction | 10.5 |
| Hernandez-Illas, 2004 [ | RS | ETN | 10 | Diffuse AS ( NeS ( Sectoral diffuse scleritis ( PUK ( Recurrent corneoscleral ulcerations ( Peripheral necrotizing corneal ulcerations ( | RA (n = 3), GPA ( RP ( | ETN proved to be effective in resolving scleritis and sterile corneal ulcerations by controlling inflammation, arresting tissue ulceration, and permitting in many cases tapering or cessation of immunosuppressive therapies | No infections or systemic toxicities observed | – |
| Tiliakos, 2003 [ | CS | ETN | 1 | NS scleritis | RA and Sjögren’s syndrome | Development of scleritis 18 months after ETN treatment, treated with local and systemic GC, local cyclosporine and azathioprine. ETN was continued during disease course | Paradoxical scleritis after ETN therapy | 36 |
| Smith, 2001 [ | RS | ETN | 6 | NS scleritis | RA | Scleritis developed in 3 patients under ETN therapy, 1, 2, and 6 months respectively. In the remaining 3 patients, ocular disease was not influenced by TNF blockade ( | Paradoxical scleritis ( | – |
ADA adalimumab, AE adverse event, AS anterior scleritis, AU anterior uveitis, BCVA best corrected visual acuity, BS Behçet’s syndrome, CD Crohn’s disease, CME cytoid macular edema, CR case report, CS case series, CT clinical trial, CZP certolizumab, ETN etanercept, GC glucocorticoid, GD Grave’s disease, GPA granulomatosis with polyangiitis, GOL golimumab, IFX infliximab, N° number of patients with scleritis, NAS necrotizing anterior scleritis, NeS necrotizing scleritis, NR not reported, pANCA perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody, PS posterior scleritis, PsA psoriatic arthritis, PU posterior uveitis, RP relapsing polychondritis, RS retrospective study, RTI respiratory tract infection, SpA spondyloarthritis, TNF tumor necrosis factor, UTI urinary tract infection
CD-20 blockade with rituximab in patients with non-infectious scleritis
| First author, year reference | Study design | N° | Type of scleritis | Systemic disease | Results/outcome measures | Safety profile | Mean follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sadhu, 2020 [ | Case series | 1 | PS | GPA | Clinical response, GC-sparing effect | NR | 18.5 (3–36) |
| Murthy, 2020 [ | Case series | 1 | NeS with PUK | GPA | Clinical resolution, GC-sparing effect | NR | 18 |
| Fabiani, 2020 [ | Case series | 2 | Diffuse AS ( PS ( | Idiopathic ( | Clinical resolution | No AE | 21 |
| Pérez-Jacoiste Asín, 2019 [ | Case series | 3 | NS scleritis ( NS scleritis + episcleritis ( | GPA | Clinical remission | NR | 50.5 |
| Ahmed, 2019 [ | Case series | 8 | AS ( AS and uveitis ( AS and PUK ( AS, PUK, uveitis ( | GPA | Clinical resolution, improvement or stabilization of visual acuity (expressed in logMAR) in 79% of the eyes. One patient experienced relapse and was re-treated with a second cycle or RTX. Four eyes with NeS required scleral-patch grafting | No side effects | 46.13 |
| You, 2018 [ | Case series | 9 | Diffuse AS ( Diffuse AS + PS ( Nodular AS ( NeS ( PUK ( | GPA | All eyes achieved remission with RTX maintenance treatment. Reduction of the modified McCluskey scale. GC-sparing effect. Mild reduction of visual acuity expressed in logMAR. No differences in intraocular pressure between baseline and last follow-up visit | Herpes zoster ( | 30 (median) |
| Fujita, 2018 [ | Case series | 1 | NS scleritis + PUK + macular edema | GPA | Clinical improvement and stabilization of BCVA | NR | 24 |
| Hardy, 2017 [ | Case series | 1 | NeS + PUK | RA | Clinical resolution, switch to golimumab after 2 years for suboptimal control of articular symptoms | NR | 24 |
| Fidelix, 2016 [ | Case report | 1 | NAS | Surgically induced scleritis | Clinical resolution, VA | NR | 6 |
| Kasi, 2016 [ | Case report | 1 | NeS, serous retinal detachment | IOI and TFIL | Improvement of symptoms and VA | NR | 12 |
| Cao, 2016 [ | Case series | 15 | Sectoral AS ( Diffuse AS ( Nodular AS ( NAS ( | Idiopathic ( GPA ( RA ( UMCTD ( | Favorable response in 14 patients (93.3%) and significant improvement of McCluskey grading scale for scleritis activity score at 6 months. Steroid-free remission | Infusion hypotension ( | 34.1 |
| Recillas-Gispert, 2015 [ | Case series | 8 | NAS ( Nodular AS ( AS ( PS + nodular AS ( | GPA | Clear clinical improvement within 4 weeks after treatment completion, 7 out of 8 achieved remission within 7 months | Community-acquired pneumonia ( | 30 (median) |
| Soon, 2015 [ | Case report | 1 | PS | CLL | Clinical resolution, improvement of BCVA | NR | 2.5 |
| Xu, 2015 [ | Case report | 1 | NS scleritis, uveitis, optic neuritis | Lymphocytic hypophysitis | Clinical resolution, improvement of VA | NR | 36 |
| Joshi, 2015 [ | Retrospective cohort | 20 | NS scleritis | GPA | Complete and partial remission in 85% and 15% of patients, respectively | Infections (17 events in 6 patients, with 8% requiring hospital admission) Cytopenia ( Hypogammaglobulinemia requiring intravenous immunoglobulin ( | 36.5 (median) |
| Suhler, 2014 [ | Clinical trial | 12 | AS ( AS + orbital disease ( PS ( Sclerouveitis ( | Idiopathic ( RA ( GPA and psoriasis ( Cogan’s syndrome ( Systemic vasculitis ( | Reduction in scleritis grading scale, GC-sparing effect, improvement in patient and physician global health score Seven patients experienced relapses after week 24 and received re-treatment with rituximab | Subjective increase of the size of blind spots in one patient and peri-infusional exacerbations of palmar psoriasis in another one | 7 |
| Caso, 2014 [ | Case report | 1 | AS | IgG4-related disease | Clinical resolution | NR | 3 |
| Bogdanic-Werner, 2013 [ | Case series | 2 | NAS ( | Idiopathic | Clinical resolution | No side effects | 17.5 |
| Morarji, 2012 [ | Case report | 1 | NAS | GPA | Clinical resolution (combo therapy with IFX and RTX) | NR | 12 |
| Iaccheri, 2010 [ | Case report | 1 | Nodular AS, AU, acute stromal keratitis | RA | Clinical resolution, relapse and 4th month | NR | 9 |
| Bussone, 2010 [ | Case series | 2 | Nodular AS ( AS ( | GPA | Clinical resolution of scleritis | CME ( | 18 |
| Chauhan, 2009 [ | Case series | 3 | NS scleritis | RA | Clinical resolution | NR | 12 |
| Taylor, 2009 [ | Case series | 6 | NAS ( AS + PS + OG ( PS + OG ( | GPA | Clinical remission | No significant side effects and no hospitalizations | 12 (median) |
| Kurz, 2009 [ | Case series | 2 | Nodular AS ( AS ( | Idiopathic scleritis ( RA ( | Clinical resolution, both patients relapsed once | Itching during infusion | 24 |
| Onal, 2008 [ | Case report | 1 | NeS, AU, and ME | GPA | Clinical resolution, improvement in VA | No AE | 12 |
| Ahmadi-Simab, 2005 [ | Case report | 1 | AS | Sjögren’s syndrome | Resolution of symptoms and symptoms | NR | 6 |
| Cheung, 2005 [ | Case report | 1 | NS scleritis | GPA | Resolution of signs and symptoms on ophthalmological evaluation and GC-sparing effect | NR | 7 |
AS anterior scleritis, AU anterior uveitis, BCVA best corrected visual acuity, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, CME cystoid macular edema, GC glucocorticoid, GPA granulomatosis with polyangiitis, IFX infliximab, IgG immunoglobulin G, IOI idiopathic orbital inflammation, N° number of patients with scleritis treated with rituximab, NAS necrotizing anterior scleritis, NeS necrotizing scleritis, NR not reported, NS not specified, OG orbital granulomatosis, PS posterior scleritis, PUK peripheral ulcerative keratitis, RA rheumatoid arthritis, RTX rituximab, TFIL tumefactive fibroinflammatory lesion, UMCTD undifferentiated mixed connective tissue disorder, VA visual acuity
Anti-IL-1 agents, tocilizumab, ustekinumab, abatacept, daclizumab, and alemtuzumab treatment in non-infectious scleritis
| First author, year reference | Study design | Biologic agent/small molecule, | Type of scleritis | Systemic disease | Results | Safety profile | Mean follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Farhat, 2021 [ | Case series | TCZ ( | Diffuse AS ( Nodular AS + uveitis ( | RP | Complete resolution of scleritis | Transient neutropenia ( | 20 |
| Fabiani, 2020 [ | Case series | ANA ( ABA ( TCZ ( TFC ( | Nodular AS ( PS ( Diffuse AS ( | Idiopathic ( RA ( FMF ( Psoriatic arthritis ( | Significant decrease in scleritis grading, in the number of relapses, GC-sparing effect and stable VA | No AE | 16 for ANA 31.7 for ABA 15.5 for TCZ 6 for TFC |
| Pyare, 2020 [ | Case report | TFC ( | Necrotizing AS | Idiopathic | Resolution of scleral inflammation and remarkable improvement of symptom within 1 month of treatment | Tolerated and no AE | NR |
| Poelman, 2020 [ | Case report | TCZ ( | AS | GCA | Rapid and sustained remission | No AE | 12 |
| Matsumoto, 2020 [ | Case series | Ustekinumab ( | NS scleritis | Spondyloarthritis with Crohn’s disease | Clinical improvement | NR | NR |
| Iwahashi, 2019 [ | CS | TCZ ( | AS + macular edema | RA | Complete resolution after a paradoxical posterior inflammation induced by infliximab | NR | 12 |
| Paley 2018 [ | Case report | TFC ( | NS scleritis | Idiopathic | Resolution of scleritis within 3 weeks | NR | 9 |
| Bottin, 2018 [ | Pilot study | ANA ( | AS ( AS + PS ( PUK ( Uveitis, macular edema, and keratitis ( | Idiopathic ( RP ( RA ( Psoriatic arthritis ( Behçet syndrome ( | Clinical remission in 8 patients within 1 month and in one additional patient within 2 months, significant decrease in ocular relapse rate, GC-sparing effect | ISR ( Dental abscess ( | 19.4 |
| Michael, 2017 [ | Case report | TCZ ( | Nodular AS | RA, pyoderma gangrenosum, and SLE | Paradoxical reaction to TCZ. Complete resolution after TCZ withdrawal at 9 months | Nodular AS | – |
| Shimizu, 2017 [ | Case report | TCZ ( | AS | RP | Sustained remission | NR | 14 |
| Knickelbein, 2016 [ | Clinical trial | Gevokizumab ( | AS ( | Idiopathic ( RA ( LES and SS ( | Most eyes (7/9) met the primary outcome with reduction of scleral inflammation grading No changes in intraocular pressure and stable visual acuity | No serious AE, ISR ( | 12 |
| Silpa-Archa, 2016 [ | Case series | TCZ ( | AS ( AS + PS ( | RA ( Inflammatory bowel disease ( Idiopathic ( | Inflammatory control with GC-sparing success in 50% of patients at 9 months and a faster response compared to patients with uveitis | Chest tightness at first 6 h after infusion ( Serious AE ( | 14.5 |
| Tode, 2015 [ | Case report | TCZ ( | Necrotizing AS | Idiopathic | Clinical resolution, stable VA | NR | 24 |
| Kommaraju, 2014 [ | Case report | Alemtuzumab ( | Diffuse AS | T cell prolymphocytic leukemia | Clinical improvement | Death due to the systemic disease | 19 |
| Botsios, 2007 [ | Case series | ANA ( | Diffuse AS | RA | Clinical remission and improvement in VA. Dose reduction to alternate days in one patient, caused a scleritis relapse | NR for ANA. Paradoxical diffuse AS under etanercept therapy in 1 patient | 24 |
| Papaliodis, 2003 [ | Case series | Daclizumab ( | NS scleritis | NS | improvement in inflammation in 1/2 | No serious AE | 11 |
ABA abatacept, AE adverse event, ANA anakinra, AS anterior scleritis, FMF familial Mediterranean fever, GC glucocorticoid, GPA granulomatosis with polyangiitis, ISR injection-site reaction, NR not reported, NS not specified, PS posterior scleritis, PUK peripheral ulcerative keratitis, RA rheumatoid arthritis, RP relapsing polychondritis, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus, SS Sjögren’s syndrome, TCZ tocilizumab, TFC tofacitinib, VA visual acuity
Fig. 1Posterior and anterior unilateral (right eye) refractory scleritis in a patient affected by psoriatic arthritis undergoing subcutaneous treatment with monoclonal TNF inhibitor golimumab 50 mg every 28 days. Ocular ultrasonography (d) shows a circular acoustically hollow area called the ring sign corresponding to an edematous Tenon capsule (*), typical signs of an active posterior scleritis. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans show the presence of a concomitant subfoveal exudative neuroepithelium detachment (°) in the same eye (a) that decreased following 2 months of biologic treatment along with a short course of oral glucocorticoids (b), and totally disappeared after 4 months of treatment (c). Anterior segment photograph (e) shows the concomitant active anterior scleritis inflammation and its resolution after 2 months treatment (f)
| This review summarizes the available evidence regarding the management of refractory non-infectious scleritis with biologic agents. |
| Non-infectious scleritis, particularly in its most aggressive forms such as necrotizing scleritis and posterior scleritis, may lead to visual impairment and severe sight-threatening ocular sequelae. |
| Monoclonal antibodies targeting tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin-6, CD20, and anti-interleukin-1 agents represent reliable options. |
| Biologic agents have shown to control scleral inflammation, reduce the overall scleritis relapses, and allow a glucorticoid-sparing effect. |
| Management of scleritis must take place in a multidisciplinary setting in order to maximize treatment benefits while minimizing safety concerns. |