1. Difluprednate for the Treatment of Uveitic Cystoid Macular Edema.
- Author
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Schallhorn JM, Niemeyer KM, Browne EN, Chhetri P, and Acharya NR
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Fluprednisolone administration & dosage, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Macular Edema drug therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Ophthalmic Solutions, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, Optical Coherence, Treatment Outcome, Uveitis complications, Uveitis diagnosis, Fluprednisolone analogs & derivatives, Macula Lutea pathology, Uveitis drug therapy, Visual Acuity
- Abstract
Purpose: To describe clinical outcomes associated with the use of topical difluprednate in treating uveitic cystoid macular edema., Design: Retrospective, interventional case series., Methods: Setting: Medical record review in a tertiary care uveitis center., Patient Population: Fifty-eight patients (72 eyes) with uveitic cystoid macular edema (CME) treated with difluprednate 0.05% ophthalmic solution between June 2012 and May 2016., Main Outcome Measures: Macular central subfield thickness (CST) determined by optical coherence tomography, improvement of CME (≥20% reduction in CST or resolution), and resolution of CME (CST ≤ 320 μm with no cysts) at 30 days after starting treatment. Outcomes were assessed up to 90 days., Results: CST on average decreased by 17% (95% CI: -33%, -7%) for eyes using only difluprednate (n = 43) and by 6% (95% CI: -17%, -2%) for eyes in patients using concomitant systemic immunosuppressive therapy (n = 29) at 30 days, a 12% difference between groups (95% CI: 2%, 21%, P = .02). Of eyes on difluprednate alone, 76% had improvement and 48% had resolution of CME. In patients using systemic therapy, 37% of eyes had improvement and 17% had resolution. Eight eyes (11%) had an intraocular pressure (IOP) > 24 mm Hg within the first 30 days. By 90 days, CME had improved in 69% of all eyes and resolved in 43% of eyes, with only 9 patients starting or increasing systemic immunosuppressive medications and 2 patients receiving periocular corticosteroid injections., Conclusions: Difluprednate was associated with an improvement in uveitic CME and could be a reasonable first-line therapy. IOP should be closely monitored., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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