Journal of Ophthalmic Inflammation and Infection (Feb 2022)

Tuberculosis-related serpiginous choroiditis: aggressive therapy with dual concomitant combination of multiple anti-tubercular and multiple immunosuppressive agents is needed to halt the progression of the disease

  • Ioannis Papasavvas,
  • Bruno Jeannin,
  • Carl P. Herbort

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12348-022-00282-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background/purpose Serpiginous-like choroiditis is a rare immune-mediated sub-entity of tubercular uveitis with a usually deleterious outcome. Treatment is still controversial. The purpose in this case series is to indicate that only aggressive treatment comprising multiple anti-tubercular and multiple immunosuppressive agents seems to be able to halt the disease progression. Methods This retrospective case series included patients diagnosed with Interferon Gamma Release Assays (IGRA) -positive serpiginous choroiditis, seen at the Centre for Ophthalmic Specialized Care, Lausanne, Switzerland, treated with combined multiple antitubercular and immunosuppressive agents at presentation and having a sufficient follow-up. Disease history before referral, appraisal of disease, treatment modalities and follow-up were analyzed. Inclusion criteria were positive IGRA patients with serpiginous choroiditis with complete Spectral-Domain Optic coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and angiography images. Results From 2001 to 2020, 24 of 1525 new patients (0.26%) were diagnosed as serpiginous choroiditis. 10/24 were related to tuberculosis (positive IGRA and/or hyper-positive Mantoux test), 8/24 were IGRA negative and in 6 there was no information available. 4/10 tuberculosis related serpiginous patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Mean age was 39 ± 5.3 years. Snellen best corrected vision acuity (BCVA) at presentation in 3/4 where the macula was preserved was 0.96 ± 0.08. In 3/4 patients, treatment with multiple tuberculostatic therapy combined with multiple immunosuppressive agents, started at presentation or in the initial months after the first consultation, was shown to stop the progression of the disease, with a retained visual acuity of 1.0. One patient with macular involvement and a bilateral visual acuity of hand movements after 11 years of insufficient treatment, improved his visual acuity to 0.25 OD and 0.05 OS and presented a substantial visual field improvement that stabilized once multiple anti-tubercular and immunosuppressive therapy was introduced. Conclusion IGRA-positive serpiginous choroiditis (serpiginous-like choroiditis) could be halted by combined multiple tuberculostatic and multiple immunosuppressive agents, as seen in our study where 3/4 early treated patients had conserved central function and one late treated patient had recovered a substantial amount of visual field. In all 4 patients this treatment regimen halted the progression of the disease.

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