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Uveitis Update

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Title: Uveitis Update


1
Uveitis Update
  • Narsing A. Rao, MD
  • Doheny Eye Institute
  • Los Angles

2
Uveitis
  • 1. Prevalence of Uveitis
  • 2. Uveitis and related entities one should not
    miss
  • 3. Investigations in supporting the clinical
    diagnosis
  • 4. Treatment of uveitis and its complications

3
Prevalence of Uveitis in adults
  • Migration and its affect on prevalence of uveitis
  • Behcets disease
  • Intraocular Tuberculosis
  • Geographic and ethnic variations
  • Ocular Histoplasmosis
  • Birdshot choroiditis
  • Vogt-Koyanagi Harada disease

4
Uveitis Entities one should not miss
  • Infectious Uveitis
  • Treponema pallidum
    (Syphilis)
  • Tuberculosis
  • Toxoplasmosis
  • Herpetic
    infection (ARN)
  • Masquerade syndromes
  • Primary intraocular
    lymphoma

5
Syphilitic uveitis
  • 1 - 2 of all uveitis cases
  • Uveitis is the common ophthalmic manifestation
  • Acquired disease
  • a. primary 3 weeks of
    incubation painless chancre
  • b. secondary 6 to 8 weeks
    later lymphadenopathy, skin rash,
  • palms
    and soles uveitis in 5 cases
  • c. Latent/ tertiary gumma,
    cardiovascular and CNS involvement
  • uveitis
    in 2.5

6
Syphilitic uveitis clinical features
  • Sudden or insidious onset blurred vision or
    floaters
  • Variable severity Variable pain, redness and
    photophobia
  • Anterior Intermediate Posterior or Pan uveitis
  • granulomatous or non-granulomatous uveitis
  • Retinitis focal or diffuse necrotizing
  • Exudative retinal detachment
  • Retinal vasculitis or perivasculitis
  • Neuroretinitis or isolated papillitis
  • Chorio-retinitis focal or multifocal

7
Syphilitic Uveitis Bilateral in
50 of the cases
8
Serology
  • Nontreponemal tests VDRL, RPR (false negative in
    30)
  • Clumping of cardiolipin ( lecithin and
    cholesterol).
  • False positive
  • SLE and other autoimmune disorders.
  • Tissue damage, liver diseases, pregnancy
  • Other Treponema- Lyme disease, Leptospirosis
  • Treponemal tests (High sensitivity /specificity)
  • FTA-ABS (Fluorescent Treponemal Antibody
    absorption test)
  • Detects antibody to T. pallidum after serum
    treated with nonpathogenic treponemal antigen
  • Hemagglutination tests MHA-TP
  • 15 in SLE and can be in Lyme disease.
  • ELISA, DNA-PCR, direct antigen
  • HIV TEST !

9
Seropositivity() by Stage
Syphilis VDRL FTA-ABS
Primary 70 80
Secondary 100 100
Latent
Tertiary 70 98
Post-treatment -
10
Syphilis
  • Syphilis is the great masquerader
  • Treatable uveitis
  • Routine RPR or VDRL and FTA-ABS or MHA-TP
  • Lumbar puncture
  • Ocular Inflammation secondary to syphilis should
    be treated as neurosyphilis (AAO)
  • HIV
  • Chao JR, Khurana RN and Rao NA. Syphilis
    reemergence of an old adversary.

  • Ophthalmology 2006 113 2074-2079

11
Serology
  • Nontreponemal tests VDRL, RPR
  • Clumping of cardiolipin (non-treponemal Abs) in
    presence of lecithin and cholesterol.
  • False
  • SLE/autoimmune.
  • Tissue destruction, liver disease, pregnancy
  • Other treponemal infection
  • Treponemal tests (High sensitivity/specificity)
  • FTA-ABS (Fluorescent Treponemal Antibody
    absorption test)
  • Detects Antibody to T. pallidum after serum
    treated with nonpathogenic treponemal antigen
  • Hemaglutination tests MHA-TP, HATTS, TPHA
  • 15 in SLE and can be in Lyme.
  • ELISA, DNA-PCR, direct antigen
  • HIV TEST !

12
Indications for LP
  • Latent syphilis gt 1 yr
  • Suspected neurosyphilis
  • Treatment failure
  • HIV co-infection
  • High RPR titers ( gt 132)
  • Late manifestations (gumma, cardiac)
  • CSF Pleocytosis, Elevated protein, VDRL
    (specific but not sensitive), FTA

13
Treatment
  • Exquisitely sensitive to Benzathine Penicillin
    G
  • Primary, Secondary and Early Latent (lt1 yr)
  • Penicillin G 2.4 million U IM x 1
  • Late Latent (gt1 yr) or Duration Unknown
  • Penicillin G 2.4 million U IM q week x 3
  • Neurosyphilis
  • Penicillin G 3-4 million U IV q4hr x 10-14 d
  • Alternatives Doxycycline, Tetracycline, CTX,
    Azithromycin
  • Consider treatment with topical, regional, oral
    corticosteroids
  • Consider treat sexual partner (Pen G/Azithromycin
    x 1 dose)

14
Tuberculous Uveitis
Two billion people are latently infected with
M.tuberculosis worldwide 9
million new cases and 3 million deaths per year
3 million uveitis patients
WHO, 2009
15
Latent TB infection
  • Clinical syndrome
  • Positive PPD
  • No clinical symptoms, negative chest X-ray
  • Likely consists of a small number of viable
    bacilli maintained in a
  • non-replicating state by host immunity

16
Tuberculosis
  • Pulmonary TB 80
  • Extra-pulmonary TB 20
  • 25 have history of TB
  • 50 have normal chest x-ray film and no
    evidence
  • of pulmonary TB
  • Up to 20 have negative PPD

Fanning A. CMAJ. 19991601597-1603.
17
Tuberculous Intraocular Inflammation
  • 1. Endemic versus Non-endemic areas
  • a. Clinical presentation
  • b. Pathogenesis
  • c. Diagnosis
  • d. Limited to the eye
  • 2. Limitations of current diagnostic approach
  • PPD and Interferon release
    assays X-ray chest
  • PCR and therapeutic trial
  • 3. Serpiginous choroiditis Serpiginous-like and
  • Multifocal Serpiginoid
    choroiditis
  • 4. Suggested approach to Diagnosis in Non-endemic
    region

18
Tuberculosis endemic and non-endemic
  • Non-endemic areas - USA and Canada
  • high rates of TB have been documented
    among
  • HIV-infected
    individuals
  • Immigrants, migrants
  • Elderly population
  • Endemic areas no such predilection except in HIV

Chan J, Flynn J. Clin Immunol. 20041102-12.
Munsiff SS, et al. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
Hum Retrovirol. 199819361-366.
19
Intraocular Tuberculosis
Endemic vs. Non-endemic
  • Endemic regions reactivation and re-infection
  • incomplete
    treatment and drug resistance
  • Non-endemic regions reactivation
  • Endemic regions Initial approach is to rule out
    tuberculosis
  • Non-endemic Initial approach is to rule
    out other infections

20
Tuberculous Uveitis Diagnostic criteria
  • Intraocular tuberculosis can mimic several
    uveitis entities
  • Diagnosis requires laboratory support
  • 1. Definite
  • Histological examination and culture of
    affected tissue.
  • Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
  • Evidence of active systemic infection
  • 2. Presumed
  • Clinical history and ophthalmic
    findings
  • PPD or Gamma interferon release assay
  • Chest x-ray findings and
  • Response to anti-TB agents
  • Gupta V, Gupta A and Rao NA. Tuberculosis in the
    eye. Survey Ophthalmol. 52 561-587, 2007.

21
Tuberculosis and PPD
  • Routine PPD Rarely helpful
  • False-positive Atypical mycobacterium BCG
  • False-negative Sarcoidosis, aging,uremia,
    lymphoma, corticosteroid use

22
PPD
  • Bayes theorem allows a mathematical approach to
    the assessment of the utility of a laboratory
    test based on the sensitivity, specificity of the
    test, and the pretest likelihood that the disease
    the test is intended to identify is present
  • a patient with uveitis and a positive PPD has a
    1 likelihood of having tuberculosis
  • The low probability means that the test is not
    useful in the routine evaluation of patients with
    uveitis
  • Indiscriminate use may lead to improper diagnosis
    and occasionally, inappropriate therapy.
  • Rosenbaum JT, Wernick R. Arch
    Ophthalmol. 19901081291-3.

23
TST QFT QFT -TST QFT TST
Sensitivity 95.5 90.9 72.7 93.3
Specificity 72.7 81.8 90.9 82.4
Positive predictive value 87.5 90.9 62.5 82.4
Negative predictive value 88.9 81.8 62.5 93.3
ROC curve (AUC) 0.84 0.86 0.82 0.88
Quantiferon T B test was not more sensitive than
TST
24
Management after TST and IGRA testing CDC
guidelines. CDC MMWR weekly report. June 25, 2010
  • Diagnosis of TB infection and decision to treat
    should not be based on TST or IGRA results alone
  • Diagnostic approach should include
    consideration of
  • a. Epidemiologic
  • b. Medical history
  • c. Other clinical information
  • Neither TST nor IGRA can distinguish LTBI from
    active TB
  • Negative TST or IGRA results are NOT sufficient
    to exclude TB

25
Nucleic acid amplification tests - PCR
  • High specificity Better sensitivity than
    microscopy.
  • Fast results Allows identification and
    investigation of genetic resistance patterns.
  • False negative results are known to occur
  • In a clinical case positive results are helpful
    and negative results cannot rule out ocular TB

26

Nucleic acid amplification tests - PCR
  • Main disadvantages
  • Higher cost and limited availability
  • Variable sensitivity
  • Inferior sensitivity for non-respiratory
    specimens (not established for ocular samples)
  • Does not allow ruling out tuberculous etiology
  • Detects only DNA (prone to contamination and
    microorganisms may not be viable or may be
    dormant)

27
Serpiginous vs. Multifocal Serpiginous like
Choroiditis
  • Serpiginous choroiditis (US and Canada)
  • Older age group
  • Vitritis absent or insignificant
  • Contiguous amoeboid extension, mainly
  • Predominantly extending from juxta
    papillary choroid
  • Insignificant pigmentation of the
    lesions except at borders
  • relative slow progression
  • Multifocal Serpiginoid choroiditis TB endemic
  • Younger age group
  • Vitritis present
  • Combined contiguous and
    non-contiguous lesions of varying
  • geographic shape
  • Juxtapapillary choroid may be spared
  • Significant pigmentation of the
    lesions
  • rapid progression

Vasconcelos-Santos, PK Rao, Davies JB, Sohn EH
and Rao NA. Clinical features of Tuberculous
Serpiginous-like choroiditis in contrast to
Classic Serpiginous Choroiditis. Arch. Ophthalmol
2010
28
Serpiginous choroiditis
  • Serpiginous choroiditis
  • Serpiginous-like choroiditis
  • Multifocal serpiginoid choroiditis
  • A. Idiopathic
  • B. Tuberculous
  • C. Herpes
  • D. Others
  • Priya K, Madhavan HN, Reiser BJ, Biswas J,
    Saptagirish R, Narayana and Rao NA Association of
    herpes virus with serpiginous choroiditis a
    polymerase chain reaction based study. Ocular
    immunol Inflamm. 2002 4253-261

29
Tuberculosis Treatment
  • Combination of isoniazid, rifampin, and
    pyrazinamide with or
  • without a fourth drug such as ethambutol or
    streptomycin
  • Fourth drug ethambutol or streptomycinis
    used in
  • suspected drug-resistant TB
  • For intraocular TB recommend treatment for
    9-12 months
  • similar to Tuberculous meningitis
  • Most clinicians prefer treatment with four
    drugs combination of
  • isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide and
    ethambutol for TWO
  • months followed by Isoniazid and rifampin for
    9- 12 months

30
Summary
  • Pathogenesis of Intraocular Tuberculosis may
    differ in Endemic vs. Non-endemic
  • Chest X-ray is not reliable
  • Interferon release assays may not
    differentiate latent from active disease and in
    most cases the diagnosis remains
  • presumed
    tuberculosis
  • PCR is helpful if positive and negative
    results are not helpful
  • Multifocal Serpiginoid choroiditis is a feature
    of intraocular TB in endemic region
  • Clinically Serpiginous choroiditis can be
    differentiated from tuberculous Serpiginous-like
    choroiditis and such differentiation is important
    to avoid un-necessary TB treatment side effects

31
Ocular Toxoplasmosis Clinical
features
  • Unilateral focal chorio-retinitis adjacent to
    healed
  • chorioretinal scar
  • a. Healed scars may be multiple, but usually
    only
  • one reactivates at a time.
  • b. Atypical forms of extensive
    chorio-retinitis can
  • occur in immunocompromised
    individuals.
  • c. Active chorio-retinitis is yellow-white,
    slightly
  • elevated, with a relatively
    well-defined border.

32
Clinical features Intraocular inflammation
  • a. Iritis. Often granulomatous may be
    associated with
  • ocular hypertension
  • b. Vitritis. Often intensified over the
    lesion
  • c. Vasculitis. Variably present Often
    arteritis, but
  • also periphlebitis and the
    vasculitis can be remote from
  • the chorio-retinitis
  • d. Optic neuritis or neuro-retinitis.

33
Appropriate Laboratory Testing
  • 1. Conformation of exposure to toxoplasmosis by
    serum ab. titer high sensitivity and low
    specificity because of high prevalence of
    positive antibody titers in general population
  • 2. Determination of toxoplasmosis IgG or IgA
    titers in aqueous
  • humor useful in cases with atypical features
  • 3. PCR of aqueous humor for toxoplasmosis DNA
    useful in older
  • patients with large lesions or in
    immunocompromised patients

34
  • Risk of congenital infection
  • Acquired toxoplasmosis infection in a pregnant
    woman
  • a. Most severe effects on fetus if acquired
    during first trimester
  • b. Risk of transmission greatest if acquired
    during third trimester
  • Seroconversion treated with antibiotic therapy
  • Prenatal treatment reduces fetal effects.

35
Differential Diagnosis
  • 1. Toxocariasis
  • 2. Cytomegalovirus retinitis
  • 3. Necrotizing herpetic retinitis
  • 4. Syphilis
  • 5. Focal fungal or bacterial infections
  • 6. Intraocular lymphoma

36
Treatment
  • Decision to treat based on proximity to macula
    and optic nerve, amount of inflammation, and
    vision
  • 1. Sight-threatening infections almost always
    treated.
  • 2. Small, peripheral lesions often observed.
  • 3. Infection is self-limited in most cases in
    healthy patients.

37
Treatment
  • 1. Pyrimethamine is most common agent combined
    with sulfadiazine or triple-sulfa, azithromycin,
    or clindamycin
  • Usually given with leukovorin to mitigate
    hematologic toxicity
  • 2. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole increasing in
    use combined with clindamycin for increased
    efficacy
  • 3. Monotherapy-generally reserved for non-sight-
  • threatening disease Doxycycline or
    minocycline

38
Anti-inflammatory Treatment
  • Topical corticosteroids
  • Oral corticosteroids
  • Indicated for vision threatening inflammation
  • Low to moderate doses for 2 to 3 weeks
  • Not given alone because of risk of worsened
    infection
  • without antibiotic coverage
  • Periocular steroids felt to be contraindicated
  • because of reports of uncontrolled
    infection after injection
  • Generally not used in immunocompromised patients

39
ARN
  • Posterior Segment findings - Clinical Triad
  • Vitritis
  • Peripheral Retinal Necrosis
  • Retinal vasculitis Arteritis
  • Optic disk may be swollen
  • Viral Etiology VZV HSV and rarely CMV

40
ARN Treatment
  • Initial 10mg/kg q8 hrs or 1500mg per meter
    square/day, Intravenous for 5-10 days. Followed
    by oral acyclovir 800mg 5 times a day for 6
    weeks good to continue 6-12 mon.
  • Oral Val acyclovir 1000mg qd or tid
  • Oral Corticosteroids (prednisone
    40-60mg/day)
  • Aspirin
  • Prophylactic photocoagulation ( 35 with
    treatment versus 80 without treatment)
  • Prophylactic vitrectomy ( may be some benefit
    in preventing RD)

41
ARN complications
  • Retinal detachment 50-70 usually within 1-2
    months. It is managed usually by vitrectomy,
    silicone oil injection and scleral buckling.
  • Contra lateral eye involvement is seen in over
    30 of the cases and this may occur usually
    within 2- 4 months

42
Summary ARN (Herpetic Retinitis)
  • Posterior or Pan uveitis, retinal arteritis and
    peripheral retinal necrosis
  • In doubt start anti-viral first while waiting for
    laboratory results in support of clinical
    diagnosis
  • A tailored treatment approach is ideal
  • Follow-up is important for contra lateral eye
    involvement and retinal detachment.

43
Investigations in support of Diagnosis
  • Imaging
  • Fundus photography wide field
  • OCT Autofluorescence
  • Fluorescein angiography
  • Classical investigations
  • CBC RPR and FTA-ABS Chest X-ray
    PPD or
  • Quantiferon TB test
  • Polymerase chain reaction
  • HSV, VZV, CMV, Toxoplasma
    M.tuberculosis

44
Treatment
  • Systemic
  • Corticosteroids
  • Immunomodulatory agents
  • Biologicals
  • Local
  • Intravitreal injections
    Corticosteroids Anti-VEGF and

  • Methotrexate and anti-Microbials
  • Dexamethosone intravitreal implant
    (Posudex)
  • Fluociolone implant (Retisert)

45
Local Intervention
  • Local Intravitreal injections
  • Rapid therapeutic concentration in
    the retinal tissue
  • Potential complications
  • Corticosteroids Anti-VEGF for refractory
    non-infectious uveitis CME
  • Triamcinolone acetonide (kenacort) 4 mg for
    CME usually effective numerous side effects
  • Anti-VEGF 2.5 mg lower therapeutic
    activity compared to the
  • corticosteroids
  • Ocular Immunology and Inflammation 2009
    17 423-30


46
Local Treatment
  • Primary Intraocular lymphoma and Intravitreal
    Methotrexate
  • Injection of 400 microg / 0.1 ml
    methotrexate twice weekly for 4 weeks

  • once a week for 8 weeks

  • once a month for 9 months

  • a total of 25 injections
  • most common side effect was corneal
    epitheliopathy, usually after third
  • injection subsides when the intervals
    between injections are increased
  • Other Potential complications cataract
    vitreous hemorrhage,
  • retinal detachment

47
Local Treatment
  • Methotrexate
  • Therapeutic activity could be similar to
    corticosteroid
  • 400micrograms in 0.1 ml
  • 15 patients with CME 4 lines
    improvement at 3 m.
  • 5 patients relapsed at 4 m.
    similar improvement
  • with reinjection
  • Potential complications cataract vitreous
    hemorrhage,
  • retinal detachment and
    corneal epitheliopathy
  • Intravitreal methotrexate cumulative dose up
    to 1,200 micrograms is safe in silicone-filled
    eyes

48
Dexamethosone intravitreal implant (Posudex)
  • Dexamethosone drug delivery in patients with
    persistent CME
  • of diverse causes including uveitis CME
  • 315 patients with chronic CME at 90 day
    primary end point, improvement in BCVA
  • 10 or more letters
    15 or more letters
  • 350 micrograms--- 24
    6
  • 700 micrograms---- 35
    18
  • 700 microg potentially useful in treatment of
    persistent CME
  • 11 developed ocular hypertension
    and 2 controls
  • Kupperman et al. Arch Ophthalmology. 2007 125
    309-17

49
Dexamethosone intravitreal implant (Posudex)
  • In uveitis
  • The benefit of improved uveitis ( vitreous
    haze) and
  • 15 or more letters from baseline was
    persistent for 26 weeks
  • 350 micrograms--- elevated IOP in 8.7
    cataract 12
  • 700 micrograms---
    7.1 15
  • Lowder C et al. Arch Ophthalmol, 2011 129
    543-53

50
Fluociolone implant (Retisert)
  • In uveitis Improvement in intraocular
    inflammation
  • Complications cataract 93 (controls 20)
    and
  • elevated IOP requiring topical medication
    in 75 trabeculectomy in 37
  • Randomized comparison of systemic therapy
    (includes corticosteroid sparing
    immunosuppressive agents) versus the implant (255
    patients 479 eyes with uveitis)
  • 1. Visual acuity improved over 24 mon in
    both groups neither
  • approach was superior
  • 2. Elevated IOP and cataracts were
    significantly high in implant
  • 3. Systemic treatment was well tolerated
    and safe but require monitoring
  • for any systemic infections

Kempen et al. Ophthalmology 2011 118 1916-26
51
Uveitis Entities one should not miss
  • Infectious Uveitis
  • Treponema pallidum
    (Syphilis)
  • Tuberculosis
  • Toxoplasmosis
  • Herpetic
    infection (ARN)
  • Masquerade syndromes
  • Primary intraocular
    lymphoma
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