Current ophthalmology practice patterns for syphilitic uveitis.
Détails
ID Serval
serval:BIB_3FAE4EF3813A
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Current ophthalmology practice patterns for syphilitic uveitis.
Périodique
The British journal of ophthalmology
Collaborateur⸱rice⸱s
International Ocular Syphilis Study Group
Contributeur⸱rice⸱s
Accorinti M., Adan A., Agarwal A., Alieldin R., Allegri P., Alvarez C., Androudi S., Arevalo J.F., Aubin M.J., Babu K., Barisani-Asenbauer T., Barron Z., Basu S., Biswas J., Bodaghi B., Bursztyn M., Jose Capella M., Caspers L., Chee S.P., Cimino L., Colombero D., Concha Del Rio L.E., Curi ALL, Dacey M., Das D., Davis J., Edwar L., Errera M.H., Finamor L.P., Fonollosa A., Fortin E., Fraser-Bell S., Funk M., Garcia-Serrano J.L., Garweg J., Garza-Leon M., George A., Goldstein D., Goto H., Gottlieb C., Guedes M., Guex-Crosier Y., Gurbaxani A., Henry C., Hooper C., Hovland T., Hwang Y.S., Invernizzi A., Isa H., Jodar-Marquez M., Kansupada K., Kawali A., Kempen J.H., Khairallah M., Krag S., Kuijpers R., Laithwaite J., Lee S.T., Lefebvre P., LeHoang P., Lobo A.M., Mahendradas P., McCluskey P., Mili-Boussen I., Mochizuki M., Moschos M., Nascimento H., Nguyen J., Nguyen Q.D., O'Keefe G., Oli Mohamed S., Ozdal P., Menendez Padron M.I., Palestine A., Paroli M.P., Pavesio C., Pichi F., Pleyer U., Przezdziecka-Dolyk J., Rao N., Rathinam S., Ribeiro M., Roy M., Sabat O P., Sandhu H.S., Sittivarakul W., Smith J., Smith W., Somkijrungroj T., Sood A., Suelves A., Tay-Kearney M.L., Teuchner B., Thorne J., Trittibach P., Tugal-Tutkun I., Unzueta-Medina J.A., Santos Valadares E.D., Van Os L., Wells J., Alvarez B.Y., Young S., Zierhut M.
ISSN
1468-2079 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0007-1161
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
11/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
103
Numéro
11
Pages
1645-1649
Langue
anglais
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Résumé
Syphilitic uveitis is re-emerging alongside the systemic infection. In July 2017, an international group of uveitis-specialised ophthalmologists formed the International Ocular Syphilis Study Group to define current practice patterns.
103 Study Group members based in 35 countries completed a 25-item questionnaire focused on case load, clinical presentations, use and interpretation of investigations, treatment and clinical indicators of poor prognosis.
Members managed a mean of 6.1 patients with syphilitic uveitis in clinics that averaged 707 annual cases of uveitis (0.9%); 53.2% reported increasing numbers over the past decade. Patients presented to more members (40.2%) during secondary syphilis. Uveitis was usually posterior (60.8%) or pan (22.5%); complications included optic neuropathy, macular oedema and posterior synechiae. All members diagnosed syphilitic uveitis using serological tests (simultaneous or sequential testing algorithms), and 97.0% routinely checked for HIV co-infection. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis was ordered by 90.2% of members, and 92.7% took uveitis plus Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test (VDRL) or fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption test (FTA-ABS) to indicate neurosyphilis. Patients were commonly co-managed with infectious disease physicians, and treated with penicillin for at least 10-14 days, plus corticosteroid. Features predicting poor outcome included optic neuropathy (86.3%) and initial misdiagnosis (63.7%). Reasons for delayed diagnosis were often practitioner-related. 82.5% of members tested every patient they managed with uveitis for syphilis.
This comprehensive report by an international group of uveitis-specialised ophthalmologists provides a current approach for the management of syphilitic uveitis.
103 Study Group members based in 35 countries completed a 25-item questionnaire focused on case load, clinical presentations, use and interpretation of investigations, treatment and clinical indicators of poor prognosis.
Members managed a mean of 6.1 patients with syphilitic uveitis in clinics that averaged 707 annual cases of uveitis (0.9%); 53.2% reported increasing numbers over the past decade. Patients presented to more members (40.2%) during secondary syphilis. Uveitis was usually posterior (60.8%) or pan (22.5%); complications included optic neuropathy, macular oedema and posterior synechiae. All members diagnosed syphilitic uveitis using serological tests (simultaneous or sequential testing algorithms), and 97.0% routinely checked for HIV co-infection. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis was ordered by 90.2% of members, and 92.7% took uveitis plus Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test (VDRL) or fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption test (FTA-ABS) to indicate neurosyphilis. Patients were commonly co-managed with infectious disease physicians, and treated with penicillin for at least 10-14 days, plus corticosteroid. Features predicting poor outcome included optic neuropathy (86.3%) and initial misdiagnosis (63.7%). Reasons for delayed diagnosis were often practitioner-related. 82.5% of members tested every patient they managed with uveitis for syphilis.
This comprehensive report by an international group of uveitis-specialised ophthalmologists provides a current approach for the management of syphilitic uveitis.
Mots-clé
eye, syphilis, uveitis, infection, inflammation
Pubmed
Web of science
Création de la notice
03/05/2019 10:13
Dernière modification de la notice
20/12/2019 6:21