Uveitis in psoriatic arthritis: study of 406 patients in a single university center and literature review
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Vicente Delmás, Ana de; Sánchez Bilbao, Lara; Calvo del Río, Vanesa; Martínez-López, David; Herrero-Morant, Alba; Galíndez-Agirregoikoa, Eva; González Mazón, Íñigo; Barroso-García, Nuria; Palmou Fontana, Natalia; González-Gay Mantecón, Miguel Ángel


Fecha
2023Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Publicado en
RMD Open, 2023, 9, e002781
Editorial
BMJ Publishing Group
Palabras clave
Biological therapy
Psoriatic arthritis
Spondylitis ankylosing
Resumen/Abstract
Background/purpose The manifestations of uveitis are well established in axial spondyloarthritis (ax-SpA), but not
in psoriatic arthritis (PsA). We aimed to assess, in a large unselected series of PsA: (A) the frequency and clinical features of uveitis; (B) its association with PsA activity, the impact of disease and functional disability, and (C) its relationship with the biological treatment. In addition, a literature review was performed.
Methods Retrospective longitudinal study of PsA
patients from a single referral hospital. PsA was classified according to the CASPAR criteria, and uveitis was diagnosed by experienced ophthalmologists.
Results We studied 406 patients with PsA (46.3±12.3
years). Uveitis was observed in 20 (4.9%). Uveitis was acute in all cases, anterior (80%), unilateral (80%) and
recurrent (50%). Patients with uveitis had a higher
prevalence of HLA-B27 (45% vs 7.5%, p<0.0001),
sacroiliitis on MRI (25% vs 8.3% p=0.027), ocular surface pathology (10% vs 0.8%, p=0.021), and median PsA impact of Disease Score (5.9 (2.1–6.8) vs 1.25 (0.0–3.0),
p=0.001) and Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Functional Index
(4 (1.6–5) vs 1.0 (0.0–3.5), p=0.01) than patients without
uveitis.
The exposure adjusted incidence rate (episodes/100
patients-year) of uveitis before versus after biological treatment decreased with anti-TNFα monoclonal antibodies (56.3 vs 9.4) and increased with etanercept
(ETN) (6.03 vs 24.2) and secukinumab (SECU) (0 vs 50) (including only one patient treated in the last two cases).
Conclusion The prevalence of uveitis in patients with PsA was about 5%. The pattern was similar to that observed in ax-SpA. Uveitis was associated with a worse quality of
life and greater functional disability. The uveitis exposure adjusted incidence rate decreased with anti-TNFα monoclonal antibodies and increased with ETN and SECU.
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