BMC Research Notes (Oct 2024)

Early adoption of triamcinolone acetonide suprachoroidal injection for uveitic macular edema: a physician survey

  • Christopher R. Henry,
  • Scott D. Walter,
  • Peter Y. Chang,
  • David J. Warrow,
  • Parisa Emami Naeini,
  • Kevin J. Blinder,
  • Teresa Brevetti,
  • Mohamed Yassine,
  • Mark S. Dacey,
  • David S. Chu,
  • Veena R. Raiji,
  • Lana M. Rifkin,
  • Milan Shah,
  • Michael A. Singer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-024-06969-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Objective To obtain physicians’ “real-world” perspectives on early experiences with triamcinolone acetonide suprachoroidal injection (SCS-TA) for treatment of patients with uveitic macular edema (UME). Results Twelve retina/uveitis specialists in the United States were surveyed about SCS-TA injection procedure and patient outcomes. Survey participants administered ≥ 291 SCS-TA injections to 243 patients with UME with various disease characteristics (etiologies, chronicity, and anatomical subtypes). Commonly reported reasons for SCS-TA adoption included potential for lowering the risk of steroid-associated intraocular pressure elevations versus intravitreal injections or implants (100%), potential for longer duration of action versus intravitreal steroid injections or implants (92%), and desire to use a new delivery modality (83%). Nearly all participants (92%) found injection procedure relatively easy post-training, with most (75%) procedurally comfortable after completing 2–5 injections. 58% of participants indicated that their patients gained 2–3 lines of vision by first follow-up visit, and 92% reported having patients who experienced 100–150 μm or greater reduction in central subfield thickness. Overall, 92% of participants were satisfied with SCS-TA treatment outcomes. Findings from this survey of early adopters of SCS-TA indicate that the suprachoroidal injection technique was easy to learn and resulted in favorable patient outcomes consistent with clinical trial data.

Keywords