Sarcoidosis-related Uveitis: Clinical Presentation, Disease Course, and Rates of Systemic Disease Progression After Uveitis Diagnosis

To document the clinical presentation, treatment, and visual outcome of sarcoid uveitis and to determine the timing and potential risk factors of sarcoidosis progression to symptomatic systemic disease from the time of sarcoid uveitis diagnosis. Retrospective, interventional case series. Subjects: P...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of ophthalmology 2019-02, Vol.198, p.30-36
Hauptverfasser: Ma, Shirley P., Rogers, Sophie L., Hall, Anthony J., Hodgson, Lauren, Brennan, Jessica, Stawell, Richard J., Lim, Lyndell L.
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container_end_page 36
container_issue
container_start_page 30
container_title American journal of ophthalmology
container_volume 198
creator Ma, Shirley P.
Rogers, Sophie L.
Hall, Anthony J.
Hodgson, Lauren
Brennan, Jessica
Stawell, Richard J.
Lim, Lyndell L.
description To document the clinical presentation, treatment, and visual outcome of sarcoid uveitis and to determine the timing and potential risk factors of sarcoidosis progression to symptomatic systemic disease from the time of sarcoid uveitis diagnosis. Retrospective, interventional case series. Subjects: Patients with dual diagnoses of uveitis and presumed/biopsy-proven sarcoidosis. Procedure: Retrospective review of 143 patient records from the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital and Eye Surgery Associates in Melbourne, Australia, between October 1990 and April 2014 coded with the dual diagnoses of uveitis and sarcoidosis. Only patients with uveitis and presumed or biopsy-proven sarcoidosis (N = 113) were included. Main Outcome Measures: Ascertainment of rate and time (months) to the development of symptomatic systemic sarcoidosis from uveitis onset; comparison of the patient demographics, characteristics of uveitis, treatment, and visual outcome between those who developed systemic sarcoidosis and those who remained systemically asymptomatic. Uveitis was the initial presenting complaint of sarcoidosis in 78.8% (n = 89). Twenty-three patients had concurrent undiagnosed systemic disease at presentation and 29 subsequently developed symptomatic sarcoidosis in an organ uninvolved at uveitis onset. The median time to the development of symptomatic systemic sarcoidosis was 12 months. No statistically significant association was ascertained between any particular uveitis characteristic and extraocular sarcoidosis progression. Uveitis was the initial presentation of sarcoidosis in the vast majority of our subjects. Concurrent undiagnosed systemic sarcoidosis was common at the time of uveitis onset. A high index of suspicion for subsequent systemic progression should also be maintained, especially within the first 5 years of the uveitis diagnosis.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ajo.2018.09.013
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Retrospective, interventional case series. Subjects: Patients with dual diagnoses of uveitis and presumed/biopsy-proven sarcoidosis. Procedure: Retrospective review of 143 patient records from the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital and Eye Surgery Associates in Melbourne, Australia, between October 1990 and April 2014 coded with the dual diagnoses of uveitis and sarcoidosis. Only patients with uveitis and presumed or biopsy-proven sarcoidosis (N = 113) were included. Main Outcome Measures: Ascertainment of rate and time (months) to the development of symptomatic systemic sarcoidosis from uveitis onset; comparison of the patient demographics, characteristics of uveitis, treatment, and visual outcome between those who developed systemic sarcoidosis and those who remained systemically asymptomatic. Uveitis was the initial presenting complaint of sarcoidosis in 78.8% (n = 89). Twenty-three patients had concurrent undiagnosed systemic disease at presentation and 29 subsequently developed symptomatic sarcoidosis in an organ uninvolved at uveitis onset. The median time to the development of symptomatic systemic sarcoidosis was 12 months. No statistically significant association was ascertained between any particular uveitis characteristic and extraocular sarcoidosis progression. Uveitis was the initial presentation of sarcoidosis in the vast majority of our subjects. Concurrent undiagnosed systemic sarcoidosis was common at the time of uveitis onset. 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Twenty-three patients had concurrent undiagnosed systemic disease at presentation and 29 subsequently developed symptomatic sarcoidosis in an organ uninvolved at uveitis onset. The median time to the development of symptomatic systemic sarcoidosis was 12 months. No statistically significant association was ascertained between any particular uveitis characteristic and extraocular sarcoidosis progression. Uveitis was the initial presentation of sarcoidosis in the vast majority of our subjects. Concurrent undiagnosed systemic sarcoidosis was common at the time of uveitis onset. 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subjects Biopsy
Cataracts
Chronic illnesses
Hospitals
Medical diagnosis
Ophthalmology
Patients
Sarcoidosis
Systemic diseases
Tuberculosis
Variables
title Sarcoidosis-related Uveitis: Clinical Presentation, Disease Course, and Rates of Systemic Disease Progression After Uveitis Diagnosis
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