4.3 Article

Uveitis in Sarcoidosis - Clinical Features and Comparison with Other Non-infectious Uveitis

Journal

OCULAR IMMUNOLOGY AND INFLAMMATION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/09273948.2022.2032189

Keywords

Uveitis; sarcoid; vision loss; immunosuppression; anterior uveitis; panuveitis

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Compared to other non-infectious uveitis, sarcoid uveitis has better visual acuity outcomes and is less likely to require second-line immunosuppression.
Purpose Comparison of sarcoid uveitis with other non-infectious uveitis treatment and visual outcomes. Methods Retrospective study of 287 eyes with sarcoid uveitis and 1517 eyes with other non-infectious uveitis (15,029 eye-years follow-up). Results Sarcoid uveitis patients presented at age 43.1 +/- 0.8 years, and 66.2% were female. Panuveitis was the most frequent presentation (48.3%), and 90.1% were bilateral. Moderate visual loss (<= 20/50) developed in 19 eyes (6.6%), and severe visual loss (<= 20/200) in 13 eyes (4.5%). Sarcoid uveitis had better visual outcomes than other non-infectious uveitis (10-year BCVA anterior uveitis 0.06 vs 0.24 p = .002; posterior disease 0.17 vs 0.38 p = .001). Oral corticosteroid use was more common with sarcoid uveitis (anterior uveitis 45.9% vs 16.4% p < .0005; posterior disease 64.0% vs 61.7% p = .635), but second-line immunosuppression was required less frequently (p = .008). Conclusions Compared to other non-infectious uveitis, sarcoid uveitis has better visual acuity outcomes and is less likely to require second-line immunosuppression.

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