1. [Autologous serum tears: Long-term treatment in dry eye syndrome].
- Author
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Beylerian M, Lazaro M, Magalon J, Veran J, Darque A, Grimaud F, Stolowy N, Beylerian H, Sabatier F, and Hoffart L
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Dry Eye Syndromes etiology, Female, Fluorescein, Follow-Up Studies, Graft vs Host Disease complications, Humans, Lubricant Eye Drops isolation & purification, Male, Middle Aged, Preservation, Biological, Retrospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Sjogren's Syndrome complications, Surface Tension, Tears chemistry, Tears metabolism, Dry Eye Syndromes drug therapy, Lubricant Eye Drops therapeutic use, Serum
- Abstract
Introduction: Dry eye disease is a multifactorial pathology of the ocular surface. The high incidence of this pathology, as well as its significant impact on quality of life and vision and its financial cost, makes it a real public health problem. While the treatment of mild cases is generally simple and effective, treatment of severe forms is often disappointing. The use of autologous serum tears (AST) represents a therapeutic alternative for the most severe cases. The purpose of our study is to evaluate the efficacy of long-term AST treatment in patients with severe dry eye disease refractory to conventional treatment or secondary to systemic diseases such as Sjögren's syndrome or Graft versus Host disease (GVH), or ocular pathologies such as neurotrophic keratitis, chemical burns and ocular cicatricial pemphigoid., Patients and Methods: This is a monocentric retrospective observational study conducted on 47 patients, with 83 eyes treated with autologous serum eye drops for isolated or secondary dry eye disease at the Marseille Public Hospitals between April 2014 and April 2017. The patients' subjective symptoms (ocular surface disease index [OSDI] score), their degree of satisfaction and the side effects were collected using questionnaires. Tear Break Up Time (BUT) and Schirmer scores were noted. A clinical evaluation based on fluorescein staining (Oxford score) was carried out prior to treatment with AST at P0 followed by 5 periods: P1 (between 1 and 3 months), P2 (3 to 9 months), P3 (9 to 15 months), P4 (15 months to 24 months), and P5 (>24 months)., Results: Out of the 83 eyes treated, the mean age was 54.39±21.56. There were 20 males (42.55 %) and 27 females (57.44 %); treatment indications consisted mainly of 25.53 % GVH, 21.27 % severe dry eye disease and 19.14 % Sjögren syndrome. The mean duration of follow-up was 9.82 months±15.50. The OSDI score decreased by 19.32 points±29.37 (P<0.05) between P0 and P1 and by 23.06 points±18.41 (P<0.05) between P0 and P4. The Oxford clinical score showed a significant decrease by the third month of treatment, between P0 and P2, by 1.32 points±1.76 (P<0.05). The Schirmer test and the BUT also showed an improvement in dry eye symptoms over time with AST, significantly at P1 (P<0.05)., Discussion: Complementary biological analyzes on the composition of AST are under way in order to identify predictive factors of effectiveness; patients not responding to AST treatment might respond to allogeneic serum from healthy donor cord blood., Conclusion: On this first series of 83 eyes treated with ASD, clinical efficacy was noted in most of the patients. No infectious complications were reported, and the satisfaction rate was very high., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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