| Literature DB >> 35520107 |
Alejandro Rodriguez-Garcia1, Alejandro Babayan-Sosa2, Arturo Ramirez-Miranda3, Concepcion Santa Cruz-Valdes3, Everardo Hernandez-Quintela4, Julio C Hernandez-Camarena1, Nallely Ramos-Betancourt5, Regina Velasco-Ramos2, Raul E Ruiz-Lozano1.
Abstract
Dry eye disease (DED) has a higher prevalence than many important systemic disorders like cardiovascular disease and diabetes mellitus, representing a significant quality of life burden for the affected patients. It is a common reason for consultation in general eye clinics worldwide. Nowadays, the diagnostic and therapeutic approach at the high corneal and ocular surface specialty level should be reserved for cases of severe and chronic dry eye disease associated with systemic autoimmune diseases or complicated corneal and ocular surface pathologies. In such cases, the diagnostic and therapeutic approach is often complex, elaborate, time-consuming, and costly due to the use of extensive dry eye questionnaires, noninvasive electronic diagnostic equipment, and clinical laboratory and ancillary tests. However, other eye care specialists attend a fair amount of DED cases; therefore, its diagnosis, classification, and management should be simple, practical, achievable, and effective. Considering that many patients attending non-specialized dry eye clinics would benefit from better ophthalmological attention, we decided to elaborate a practical DED classification system based on disease severity to help clinicians discriminate cases needing referral to subspecialty clinics from those they could attend. Additionally, we propose a systematic management approach and general management considerations to improve patients' therapeutic outcomes according to disease severity.Entities:
Keywords: Schirmer test; dry eye disease; dry eye questionnaire; fluorescein staining; tear breakup time; tear osmolarity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35520107 PMCID: PMC9061212 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S351898
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Dry Eye Disease Classification Systems Based on Severity
| Author/Group (Year) | Country | Consensus Methodology | Severity Criteria | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Triple Classification of Dry Eye for Practical Clinical Use | ||||
| Murube et al, 2005 | Spain | Consensus development conference | - | Three schemes were proposed, based on etio-pathogenesis, damaged glands and tissues, and severity |
| The Dysfunctional Tear Syndrome Study Groupa | ||||
| Behrens et al, 2006 | United States | Delphi | - | “Dysfunctional tear syndrome” was deemed as more accurate from a pathophysiological standpoint |
| TFOS DEWS I Report | ||||
| DEWS Subcommittee, 2007 | United States | Consensus development conference | - | Suggested to reintroduce the term “dry eye” as it was embedded in the literature |
| The ODISSEY European Consensus | ||||
| Baudouin et al, 2014 | France | Consensus development conference | - | Considers the possibility of discordance between signs and symptoms |
| The Italian Dacryology & Ocular Surface Society Classification | ||||
| Barabino et al, 2021 | Italy | NGT and Delphi | - | This system includes the restoration capacity of the ocular surface, being intact in type 1, reduced in type II, and abolished in type III disease |
Notes: aAt least ≥1 symptom or sign within each category must be present to qualify for each level. bSigns and symptoms must be present. cIncludes Schirmer test<3mm, severe MGD or eyelid inflammation, severe conjunctival staining, impaired visual function, filamentary keratitis, osmolarity>328 mOsm/L, IC≥3 (Nelson scale), impaired corneal sensitivity, refractory to standard treatment, altered IVCM or aberrometry, and inflammatory markers (ie, HLA-DR, MMP-9, among others).
Abbreviations: CFS, corneal fluorescein staining; TFOS DEWS, Tear Film & Ocular Surface Society Dry Eye Workshop; MGD, Meibomian gland dysfunction; TFBUT, tear film breakup time; DED, dry eye disease; DTS, Dysfunctional Tear Syndrome; OSDI, Ocular Surface Disease Index; IC, impression cytology; IVCM, in vivo confocal microscopy; HLA-DR, human leukocyte antigen-DR; MMP-9, matrix metalloproteinase-9; NGT, nominal group technique.
Figure 1Dry eye disease classification criteria proposed by the Mexican Dry Eye Disease Expert Panel.
Consensus Criteria for Classification of Dry Eye Disease
| - Spontaneous restoration of the ocular surface |
| Plus |
| - Sporadic/intermittent symptoms (criterion 1) |
| |
| - ≥1 or more (criteria 2–8) |
| - Restoration of the ocular surface possible with appropriate treatment |
| Plus |
| - Recurrent symptoms (criterion 1) |
| Plus |
| - ≥1 or more (criteria 2–8) |
| - Irreversible damage to the ocular surface |
| Plus |
| - ≥1 or more (criteria 1–8) |
Notes: aSymptoms may or may not be present in severe disease due to impaired sensitivity. bCorneal sensitivity must be diminished if absent symptoms.
Figure 2Stepwise diagnostic approach for dry eye disease.
Frequently Used Dry Eye Disease Questionnaires in Clinical Practice
| Questionnaire | No. Items | Landmark Study Author (year) | Maximum Score | Cut-Off Values | Spanish Validated (Yes/No) | Study Author (Year) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DEQ-5 | 5 | Chalmers et al, 2010 | 22 points | Normal: ≤6 pts | Yes | Martinez et al, 2019 |
| Dry eye: 7–12 pts | ||||||
| Suspect SS: >12 pts | ||||||
| IDEEL | 57 | Abetz et al, 2011 | 100 points | Mild: 40–50 pts | No | N/A |
| Moderate: 51–63 pts | ||||||
| Severe: >64 pts | ||||||
| OSDI | 12 | Schiffman et al, 2000 | 100 points | Mild: 13–22 pts | Yes | Beltran et al, 2013 |
| Moderate: 23–32 pts | ||||||
| Severe: ≥33 pts | ||||||
| SANDE | 2 | Schaumberg et al, 2007 | 100 mm | N/A | No | N/A |
| McMonnies | 12 | McMonnies et al, 1987 | 45 points | Dry eye: >14.5 pts | No | N/A |
| CLDEQ-8 | 8 | Chalmers et al, 2012 | 37 points | CLD: ≥12 pts | Yes | Garza et al, 2019 |
Abbreviations: DEQ-5, Dry Eye Questionnaire-5; SS, Sjögren syndrome; IDEEL, Impact of Dry Eye on Everyday Life; N/A, not available; OSDI, Ocular Surface Disease Index; SANDE, Symptom Assessment in Dry Eye; CLDEQ-8, Contact Lens Dry Eye Questionnaire-8; CLD contact lens discomfort.
Figure 3Different patterns of TFBUT at different time elapsed after blinking in patients with (A) staphylococcal blepharitis, (B) MGD, and (C) Sjögren syndrome with associated MGD.
Figure 4Corneal fluorescein staining score.
Figure 5Different patterns and intensities of positive corneal fluorescein staining in different subtypes of dry eye. (A) Paracentral epithelial punctate keratitis in ocular mucous membrane pemphigoid. (B) Diffuse fluorescein staining in graft-vs-host-disease. (C) Severe punctate keratitis in Sjögren syndrome.
Figure 6Representation of the Oxford scheme for ocular surface staining.
Figure 7Systematic treatment approach proposed by the Mexican Dry Eye Expert Panel.