| Literature DB >> 35979409 |
Abhay Shivpuri1, Inga Turtsevich1, Ameenat Lola Solebo1,2,3, Sandrine Compeyrot-Lacassagne1,2.
Abstract
The challenges of childhood uveitis lie in the varied spectrum of its clinical presentation, the often asymptomatic nature of disease, and the evolving nature of the phenotype alongside normal physiological development. These issues can lead to delayed diagnosis which can cause significant morbidity and severe visual impairment. The most common ocular complications include cataracts, band keratopathy, glaucoma, and macular oedema, and the various associated systemic disorders can also result in extra-ophthalmic morbidity. Pediatricians have an important role to play. Their awareness of the various presentations and etiologies of uveitis in children afford the opportunity of prompt diagnosis before complications arise. Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA) is one of the most common associated disorders seen in childhood uveitis, but there is a need to recognize other causes. In this review, different causes of uveitis are explored, including infections, autoimmune and autoinflammatory disease. As treatment is often informed by etiology, pediatricians can ensure early ophthalmological referral for children with inflammatory disease at risk of uveitis and can support management decisions for children with uveitis and possible underling multi-system inflammatory disease, thus reducing the risk of the development of irreversible sequelae.Entities:
Keywords: inflammation; ocular inflammation; pediatric uveitis; pediatrician; uveitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35979409 PMCID: PMC9376387 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2022.874711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.569
Figure 1Anatomy of the human eye (3).
Differentiating two key causes of the pediatric red eye* adapted from Gilani et al. (5).
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| Pain | Highly variable, from entirely pain-free, to significant and constant** | Itching/burning sensation |
| Hyperaemia | Deep | Superficial |
| Pupil | Normal, constricted or asymmetric | Normal |
| Aqueous flare (protein exudate within anterior chamber) | Maybe present, and if severe, the turgidity of the anterior chamber fluid may obscure the details of the iris | Absent |
| Disease course | Relapsing/remitting, typically chronic | Short lived (typically 2 weeks): allergic conjunctivitis may be chronic¥ |
*A newly red eye in a child with a multi-system inflammatory disease known to be associated with uveitis should always be treated with a high index of suspicion.
**Scleritis, in isolation or in association with uveitis, is characterized by severe pain with redness.
¥Some auto-inflammatory and autoimmune conditions can cause a chronic primary inflammatory conjunctivitis.
Infectious uveitis in children.
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| Herpes simplex and zoster virus ( | - Anterior - Unilateral - Posterior uveitis in neonates with disseminated HSV - Panuveitis in immunosuppressed | - HSV-1 keratitis - Acute retinal necrosis - Unilateral viral conjunctivitis with vesicles on the lid margin | USA | - Oral or topical anti-viral for 7–10 days - Topical steroids | No | Children |
| Toxoplasmosis ( | - Congenital or acquired infections - Unilatera - Chorioretinal lesions or scars seen, with new inflammation adjacent to congenital toxo scar - Posterior or panuveitis in children | - Usually, sequalae of congenitally acquired infection | Netherlands Italy USA | Ranges from Pyrimethamine, Sulfadiazine, Clindamycin Azithromycin, prednisone to no treatment as chorioretinitis may be self-limiting in immunocompetent patients | Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole for 45 days in high-risk patients | Children |
| Syphilis ( | - HIV positive: anterior syphilitic uveitis - HIV negative mainly had panuveitis - Bilateral - Uncommon in childhood but important cause of uveitis with posterior segment changes, as treatment prevents irreversible ocular and systemic sequalae | - Posterior uveitis - Chorioretinitis - Retinal vasculitis | Australia | Moderate duration Penicillin course (between 10 and 21 days) | No | Adults |
| Tuberculosis (TB) ( | - Granulomatous uveitis - Acute or chronic - Bilateral - Multiple manifestations: Posterior, anterior, intermediate uveitis, panuveitis and retinal vasculitis | - Chronic granulomatous disease is characterized by large “greasy” intraocular inflammatory deposits (mutton fat keratic precipitates), iris nodules, and posterior synechiae | TB endemic countries, e.g., India, China, Philippines, Pakistan, Bangladesh, South Africa, but rising incidence globally | Anti-tubercular treatment combined with systemic corticosteroids | No | Children (through the collaborative ocular tuberculosis study group, COTS) |
| Cat-scratch disease ( | Unilateral anterior uveitis most common | - Macular star and optic nerve oedema, neuroretinitis | USA (can be found in any country with cats) | Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole treatment | No | Children |
| West Nile virus ( | Multifocal choroiditis | - Optic neuritis, retinitis, neuroretinitis, and occlusive/retinal vasculitis have been reported | USA and India, first reported from Uganda | Supportive therapy and prevention of mosquito bites | No | Adults |
| Leptospirosis ( | Acute unilateral or bilateral non-granulomatous panuveitis | - Anterior uveitis, - Panuveitis - Hypopyon - Cataract - Glaucoma | India outbreaks have been reported in Brazil, Nicaragua, Guyana and several other Latin American countries. More in tropical countries. | Doxycycline or penicillin ± steroids | No | Adults and children |
| Leishmaniasis ( | 2 main phenotypes: - uveitis with active Leishmania infection - Leishmania immune reconstitution syndrome | - Seen more commonly in the immunocompromised | - Mainly South and Central America, Africa, southern Europe and Asia. - 90% severe infections occur in just six countries: Brazil, Ethiopia, Sudan, South Sudan, India, and Bangladesh. | Topical steroids, intra-ocular/sub-conjunctival steroids; systemic steroids; intra-ocular Amphotericin B; systemic amphotericin B; systemic antimonial; systemic miltefosine; pentamidine; systemic fluconazole | No | Adults and children |
| Ebola virus ( | - Unilateral Anterior uveitis | - Uveitis or conjunctivitis | Sierra leone (West Africa) | Topical or oral steroids | No | Adults and children |
| Zika virus ( | - Anterior and posterior uveitis reported in infants with congenital infection | - Chorioretinal atrophy, pigmentary mottling of the retina, or optic nerve disease, bilateral macular and perimacular lesions | Brazil and USA | Topical steroids | No | Adults and children |
| Chikungunya/Dengue ( | Chikungunya—unilateral or bilateral anterior uveitis is commonest, but all segments of the eye can get involved. Dengue—Posterior and panuveitis initial few weeks and anterior uveitis up to 5 months after onset of symptoms | - Photophobia, retro-orbital pain and conjunctivitis | Endemic in Africa, South and South-East Asia, India, and South and Central America. | Topical, oral or IV steroids based on the involvement of the eye along with cycloplegics | No | Adults and children |
| Mycoplasma ( | - Either unilateral or bilateral anterior uveitis | - Intermediate uveitis less common | Israel and Greece | Steroids and anti-mycoplasma antibiotics (erythromycin and amoxicillin) | No | Children |
| Lyme disease ( | Bilateral chorioretinitis, posterior uveitis and white dot syndrome | - Conjunctivitis, episcleritis, keratitis, uveitis, neuroretinitis, retinal vasculitis and cranial nerve palsies | Turkey, USA and France | Steroids and antibiotics (doxycycline) | No | Adults |
| Candida ( | Intermediate and posterior uveitis (chorioretinitis) | - Endophthalmitis | Egypt and Netherlands | Oral Voriconazole/Fluconazole, Intravitreal Amphotericin B, | No | Adults |
| Rubella ( | Unilateral anterior uveitis | - Keratic precipitates - Iris atrophy and/or heterochromia - Vitreous opacities - Cataract | Netherlands and USA | Topical and systemic steroids, topical NSAIDs and periocular corticosteroid injections | No | Adults |
| EBV ( | Granulomatous panuveitis | - Chronic active EBV infection associated severe uveitis - Cataract | Japan, China and USA | Valganciclovir and topical or oral steroids | No | Adults and Children |
| HIV ( | - Anterior uveitis followed by posterior, panuveitis and intermediate uveitis. - Suspected associations in HIV patients: Herpes zoster, TB or lymphoma or CMV | - Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) | UK, Thailand and Czech Republic | Topical steroids, cycloplegics and antivirals | Highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) | Adults |
| CMV ( | - Chronic and/or recurrent anterior uveitis - Posterior uveitis | - CMV retinitis | Netherlands, Singapore | Valganciclovir or Ganciclovir | No | Adults |
Recommended baseline evaluation of uveitis by the pediatrician.
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| Inflammatory arthritis associated uveitis -ANA (IIF), HLA-B27 by PCR, ACE (Angiotensin Converting Enzyme) | Bacterial: Mantoux, Interferon Gamma Releasing Assay (IGRA), Chest X ray, Syphilis—VDRL, Mycoplasma IgM |
| IBD associated uveitis-Fecal Calprotectin | Parasitic: Toxoplasma IgM or PCR, Histoplasmosis, Cat-scratch disease serology, Lyme disease serology |
| Autoinflammatory causes: genetic testing for recurrent fevers—TINU, CAPS, Blau's disease | Fungal: Candida albicans infection |
| Vasculitis and SLE associated: p-ANCA, c-ANCA, ANA (IIF), ENA profile, dsDNA, HLA B51 | Viral: Rubella IgM, Adenovirus PCR, Herpes PCR, HIV/AIDS, EBV PCR, CMV PCR, VZV PCR |
| History taking is key: 1. medications/vaccination triggers, 2. review of systems looking for extra-ocular involvement (hearing loss, bowel symptoms, rash, joint pain, morning stiffness, chest pain/shortness of breath etc..) |
Figure 2Anatomical classification and underlying diagnoses in pediatric uveitis adapted from Maleki et al. (2).
Medications and monitoring.
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| DMARDs | Methotrexate | −15 mg/m2 (up to 30 mg/m2/week) | - Gastrointestinal (GI) such as (oral ulcers, nausea, vomiting) - Hepatorenal toxicity | - Liver function - Full blood count |
| Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) | −600 mg/m2 twice daily or 2–3 grams/day in divided doses | - Hair loss, fatigue, gastrointestinal discomfort - Leukopenia | - Liver function - Full blood count | |
| Azathioprine | −2–3 mg/kg/day orally | - Nausea, vomiting diarrhea - Dose related myelosuppression | - Liver function - Full blood count | |
| Cyclosporine | −2.5–5 mg/kg/day in twice daily dosing | - Hypertension, nausea, vomiting, hirsutism - Nephrotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, anemia, hypercholesterolemia | - Renal and liver function - Blood pressure monitoring | |
| Biologics | Adalimumab | −20 mg Subcutaneous every 15 days for weight <30 Kg - 40 mg subcutaneous every 5 days for weight >30 Kg | - Injection site reaction - Leukopenia | - Pre-biologic screen—(HIV, HepB, HepC, TB) - Full blood count, liver function - Trough drug levels and antibodies |
| Infliximab | −5–6 mg/kg IV infusions (up to 10 mg/kg) | - Anaphylactic reaction - Leukopenia | - Pre-biologic screen—(HIV, HepB, HepC, TB) - Full blood count, liver function - Trough drug levels and antibodies |
Extra-ocular involvement and monitoring.
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| - | - HLA B-27 positivity and sacroiliitis are associated with uveitis | |
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| - CSF pleocytosis - EDSS score, cognitive performance, motor performance, neuropsychiatric complaints—fatigue and mood disorders | ||
| - Inflammatory markers show raised ESR or CRP with high WBC counts with neutrophilia and high platelets and - 2D ECHO in acute stage for myocarditis and coronary aneurysms (more in subacute stage) - Evaluation based on organ involved | ||
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| - Chronic multisystemic autoimmune disease symptoms can be divided into constitutional, mucocutaneous, neurological, musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, gastrointestinal, ophthalmic and hematological. | - - | |
| - Rare autoimmune vasculitis of unknown etiology that is classically presented with interstitial keratitis and sensorineural hearing loss with tinnitus, vertigo and constitutional symptoms - CS is a typical disease of young Caucasian adults with no gender predominance and being very rare in childhood with only a few cases reported in children | - | |
| - Self-limiting autoimmune endotheliopathy characterized by the clinical triad: CNS dysfunction, sensorineural hearing loss and retinal vaso-occlusive disease mainly affecting young adult females, extremely rare in children. - Disease onset may be categorized into two clinical subtypes: either severe encephalopathy associated with headaches, memory loss, psychosis, seizures, dementia, or ocular involvement with recurrent episodes of branch retinal artery occlusion (BRAO) or milder phenotype with even absent neurological features | - |
CAPS, Cryopyrin associated periodic syndrome; FCAS, Familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome; MWS, Muckle Wells Syndrome; NOMID, Neonatal onset multisystem inflammatory disease; CINCA, Chronic infantile neurologic cutaneous and articular syndrome; DADA2, Deficiency of Adenosine deaminsase 2; TINU, Tubulointerstitial nephritis and uveitis; NAG, N-acetyl glucosaminidase; CHAQ, Childhood health assessment questionnaire; JADAS, Juvenile arthritis disease activity score; JADI, Juvenile arthritis damage index; BASDAI, Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis disease activity index; ASDAS, Ankylosing spondylitis disease activity score; PASI, Psoriasis area and severity index; EDSS, Expanded disability status scale; BILAG, British Isles Lupus Assessment Group; JLSE, juvenile onset systemic lupus erythematous; SLICC-SDI, Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics-standardized damage index; SLEDAI-2K, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index 2000.