EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF TNF ANTAGONISTS IN OCULAR SARCOIDOSIS: DATA FROM THE FRENCH REGISTRY STAT
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Titre | EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF TNF ANTAGONISTS IN OCULAR SARCOIDOSIS: DATA FROM THE FRENCH REGISTRY STAT |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2017 |
Auteurs | Marquet A, Chapelon-Abric C, Maucort-Boulch D, Cohen-Aubart F, Perard L, Bouillet L, Abad S, Bielefeld P, Bouvry D, Andre M, Noel N, Bienvenu B, Proux A, Vukusic S, Bodaghi B, Sarrot-Reynaud F, Iwaz J, Broussolle C, Saadoun D, Jamilloux Y, Valeyre D, Seve P, Francophone GSarcoidose |
Journal | SARCOIDOSIS VASCULITIS AND DIFFUSE LUNG DISEASES |
Volume | 34 |
Pagination | 74-80 |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 1124-0490 |
Mots-clés | Efficacy, Safety, sarcoidosis, TNF antagonists, Uveitis |
Résumé | Backgroung: This study investigated the efficacy and safety of TNF antagonists in sarcoid uveitis in unselected cases. Design: This is a multicentre study on patients with sarcoidosis who received TNF antagonists in pneumology and internal medicine departments in France. We present here the subgroup of patients with biopsyproven sarcoid uveitis included in the nationwide registry STAT (Sarcoidosis treated with TNF AnTagonists). Results: Among the 132 patients included in this multicenter study, 18 patients with refractory uveitis were treated as a first-line TNF antagonist with infliximab (n=14), adalimumab (n=3) and certolizumab (n=1). Before anti-TNF initiation, the median duration of sarcoidosis was 42 months and 83% of the patients have been treated with at least one immunosuppressive drug. Six patients switched for a second-line TNF antagonist. After a mean time under treatment of 29 months, the treatment resulted in a significant decrease of the ophthalmic extrapulmonary Physician Organ Severity Tool (ePOST) (mean score: 4.2 vs. 2.6) scores and a steroid sparing effect (29.4 +/- 20.7 vs. 6.2 +/- 5.2 mg/d). Overall, the ophthalmic response, either complete or partial, was 67%. Nine patients (50%) presented adverse events, including severe infectious complications in 5 patients, which required anti-TNF treatment interruption in 6 cases (33%). Among the 7 responder patients who discontinued anti-TNF therapy, 71% relapsed. Finally, 12 patients (67%) could continue TNF antagonist treatment. Conclusions: TNF antagonists were efficient in 67% of biopsyproven refractory sarcoid uveitis. Severe adverse events, mainly infectious complications, were frequent. The high frequency of relapses after anti-TNF-alpha discontinuation requires a close patient follow-up thereafter. |