Title: How to take care of our patients
1How to take care of our patients
2How to take care of our patients
3How to take care of our patientseye
- Adequate prevention of preventable disease
- Appropriated treatment of treatable disease
4How to prevent
- What is preventable disease
- How to detect preventable disease
- Who is responsible for detection
- Who is target group to be prevented
5CMVR is preventable disease
- Who is the high risk group for CMV retinitis
- Prevention is done by early detection
- Early detection is for early treatment
- The best way to prevent CMVR occurrence is HAART
in timely period?
6Cytomegalovirus Retinitis High Risk
- CD Count lt 50
- The following clinical risk factors were
significant predictors of CMV retinitis - flashing lights or floaters (OR, 11.42 95 CI,
3.43 to 38.01), - cotton-wool spots (OR, 2.90 95 CI, 1.01 to
8.29), - previous opportunistic infections (OR, 1.81 95
CI, 1.24 to 2.64), - previous nonocular CMV infection (OR, 82.99
95 CI, 6.86 to 1004.58), - previous Mycobacterium infection (OR, 3.41 95
CI, 0.99 to 11.85), - homosexuality (OR, 2.83 95 CI, 1.13 to 7.12).
- HLA B44 , B51 , DR7
Clinical risk factors for cytomegalovirus
retinitis in patients with AIDS Ophthalmology.
2004 Jul111(7)1326-33.
7Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Diagnosis
- based on
- Clinical Fundus Appearance
- vitreous and aqueous humor analysis for CMV DNA
- endoretinal biopsy
- for atypical presentation or unresponsive
to treatment - (not be done in normal setting)
-
8Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Symptoms
- asymptomatic
- light flash
- floater
- visual field loss
- blurred or distorted vision
- red eye,eye pain,photophobia are rare
Peripheral retinitis
Visual field loss at correspondent retinitis
CMVR c CRAO
CMVR c RRD
Hemorrhage involve macula
CMV papillitis
9Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Signs
- no conjunctival hyperemia
- minimal anterior chamber inflammatory reaction
- minimal vitreous inflammatory reaction
- typically yellow to white area of retinal
necrosis that follow a vascular distribution
10Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Clinical Presentation
- Spectrum of fundus appearance
- Fulminant / Edematous form
- Indolent form
- Frosted Branch Angiitis form
- Atypical form
- Post Treatment
- Inactive lesion
- Reactivated lesion
-
11Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Clinical Presentation
- Fulminant form
- dense confluent
- area of retinal opacification
- location along vesseles
- no clear central atrophic area
- sufficient retinal hemorrhage
- inflammatory
- perivascular
- sheathing
12Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Clinical Presentation
- Indolent form
- faint grainy opacification
- or blush fire
- location not overlying vessel
- may have central clear
- atrophic area
- no or minimal retinal hemorrhage
- no inflammatory vascular sheathing
13Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Clinical Presentation
- Frosted branch angiitis form
- usually neglected case
- indicate insufficient control of disease
- practically seen in patient
- who lost follow up
- after treatment
14CMV papillitis
after treatment
15Inactive CMVR (retinal scar)
- Occur after treatment
- (HAART/-intravitreal gancyclovir)
16D/D for CMVR
- HIV retinopathy
- Progressive Outer Retinal Necrosis
- Toxoplasma Retinitis
- Multiple choroiditis
- Intraocular Lymphoma
- Ocular Syphilis
17HIV retinopathy
- most common ophthalmic lesion
- characterized by
- cotton wool spot
- retinal hemorrhage
- microaneurysm
- telangiectatic vessel
- indicate immune deterioration
18Progressive Outer Retinal Necrosis
- caused by VZV , Herpes simplex virus , CMV
- minimal anterior and vitreal
- inflammatory reaction
- start at peripheral retina first
- as deep multifocal opacification
- then progress rapidly to
- posterior pole and cause
- secondary retinal detachment finally
19Toxoplasma Retinitis
- usually acquired disease
- granulomatous anterior uveitis
- focal or multifocal retinitis /- vitritis
- With or without previous toxoplasma
retinochoroidal scar - approximately 50 of retinitis patient
- have encephalitis
- (not vice versa)
after treatment
20Multiple Choroiditis
- This slide show cryptococcal choroiditis
- They finally gone without visual compromise
21Take a break please
22Who is responsible for detection
- Detection is diagnosis
- Diagnosis is both process and output
- What is/are input ?
- Inputs are doctor,knowledge,skill,instrument
- Doctor should be ophthalmologist,internist or
general physician? - The truth(answer) is out there..
23doctor
- Ophthalmologist
- Indirect ophthalmoscopy
- Non ophthalmologist
- Direct ophthalmoscopy
24direct v.s. Indirect ophthalmoscopy
25Systematic evaluation of fundus bydirect
ophthalmoscopy
26Inactive CMVR without antiCMV treatment
IVOS , Oct2000, Vol41, No.11
IVOS , Oct2000, Vol41, No.11
27When CMVR was treated
- CMVR in critical zone zone1 (posterior pole)
- is perfect indication
- VA is finger count or better
- (useful vision)
- Receive Antiretroviral treatment
- (since July 2000)
Zone1 is retinal area that risk to vision loss
Holland GN , Buhles WC Jr , Mastre B , et al. A
controlled retrospective study of gancyclovir
treatment for cytomegalovirus retinopathy use of
a standardized system for the assessment of
disease outcome. Arch Ophthalmol
19891071759-66.
28Appropriated Treatment
- For thai patients?
- For rich or poor patients?
- For urban or rural patients?
- For Cytomegalovirus retinitis is/are
29CMVR Treatment in Bamrasnaradura Institute
- Intravitreal ganciclovir is first line treatment
option in AIDS patients - (except comorbid extraocular cytomegalovirus
infection such as CMV colitis, esophagitis) - Dosage 2000 microgram in 0.02 cc every 2 weeks
- (No induction)
- Insulin syringe 29 gauge U100 type
- OPD setting
- Release pressure by AC tapping as necessary
30(No Transcript)
31FDA approved Drug for treatment Cytomegalovirus
Retinitis
- Systemic Treatment
- IV ganciclovir Induction and Maintenance
- IV Foscarnet Induction and Maintenance
- IV ganciclovir Induction and Oral ganciclovir
Maintenance - IV Cidafovir Induction and Maintenance
- Oral valganciclovir for Induction and Maintenance
- (CMVR not in zone1 )
- Local treatment
- Intravitreal fomivirsen
- ganciclovir implant
-
Note Intravitreal ganciclovir were not approved
by FDA
32Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Local Treatment
(available)
- Intravitreal drugs
- ganciclovir Induction 200-4000 mcg
2-3times/week - Maintenance same dose weekly
- Foscarnet Induction 1.2-2.4 mg twice/week
- Maintenance same dose weekly
- Cidofovir 20 mcg every 5-6 weeks
- Fomivirsen induction 330 mcg biweekly x2
- maintenance same dose monthly
- ganciclovir Intraocular Implant every 6-8 months
33How to prepare intravitreal drug
34Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Intravitreal Injection
35CYTOMEGALOVIRUS RETINITISlocal treatment
- advantages
- prevent systemic side effect
- need less drug so less cost
- improve quality of life
- higher drug concentration
- disadvantages
- Inability to protect contralateral eye
- increase risk of extraocular cmv infection
- less survival
36Intraocular ganciclovir Level
- microgram/ml
- intravenous induction 0.78
- intravenous maintenance 0.63
- oral ganciclovir 0.83
- implant 4
- intravitreal injection ( at 24hr ) 143
- intravitreal injection ( at 72hr ) 23
Morlet N,Young S,Naidoo D,Graham G,Coroneo
MT. High dose intravitreal ganciclovir injection
provides a prolonged therapeutic intraocular
concentration. Br J Ophthalmol. 199680214-216
37CYTOMEGALOVIRUS RETINITIS Local
Treatment(complications)
- increase intraocular pressure
- increase risk of retinal detachment
- vitreous hemorrhage
- scarring of injected site
- retinal toxicity?
- Endophthalmitis
- Post-surgical scleritis
After treatment
Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging. 2004
May-Jun35(3)254-5.
38Rhegmatogenous retinal detachmentmay result from
tear of retinitis
NORMAL
compared to
RRD
retinal tear not shown here
left fundus of another patient
39Cytomegalovirus Retinitisin HAART era
- Decrease Incidence
From 21.9 Per 100
Person-Year (PY)
To 3.7 Per 100 Person-Year - Change in the Clinical Course of the Disease
- From Progressive if lefted untreated
- To Ability to discontinue AntiCMV agent without
progression - Altered Clinical Presentation
40Clinical Course Change (more)
- CMVR is still be risk factor for mortality in
AIDS patients - RR1.6 when CMVR presence
- RR1.9 when CMV viral load gt400 copy/ml
- Decrease rate of second eye involvement
- from 0.40 to 0.07(0.340.02)/PY
- Decrease rate of retinal detachment
- from 0.50 to 0.06(0.300.02)/PY
- Decrease rate of retinitis progression
- from 3.0 to 0.10(0.580.02)/PY
-
Risk factors for mortality in patients with AIDS
in the era of highly activeantiretroviral
therapy. Ophthalmology.2005 May112(5)771-9
Course of cytomegalovirus retinitis in the era
of highly active antiretroviral therapy 2.
Second eye involvement and retinal detachment.
Ophthalmology. 2004 Dec111(12)2232-9.)..
Course of cytomegalovirus retinitis in the era of
highly active antiretroviral therapy 1.
Retinitis progression. Ophthalmology. 2004
Dec111(12)2224-31
Ophthalmology.2005 May112(5)771-9
Ophthalmology. 2004 Dec111(12)2232-9.
Ophthalmology. 2004 Dec111(12)2224-31.
41Altered Clinical Presentation
- Immune Recovery Vitritis
- Cystoid Macula Edema
- Epiretinal Membrane
- Vitreomacula traction syndrome
- Disc Edema and Neovascularization
- Uveitic glaucoma
- Panuveitis
- Varicella zoster virus
- immune recovery stromal keratitis
-
Retina. 2004 Jun24(3)376-82. Br J
Ophthalmol 2001 ( November ) 851384 Am J
Ophthalmol. 2004 Apr137(4)636-8.
42Immune Recovery Uveitis (IRU)
- Criteria diagnosis is 3I
- Intraocular inflammation characterized by
vitritis ,disc edema , cystoid macula edema - Inactive cytomegalovirus retinitis
- Immune recovery by CD4 rise gt50 longer than 3
months
43question
44???????????????
- ????? loss follow up ????? ???????????????????
??????????????????????????????????????????????29??
??98?? (29.5) - ????????????????????????????????????????????????CD
4 count - ?????????????????????????????????cytomegalovirus
- ?????????????????????????????????????????
- ??????????????????????????????????????????????????
?
45Thank you for your attention