Tucker Susan M, Haas Sara J, Zaihra Rizvi Tasneem
Division of Ophthalmology, Lahey Hospital & Medical Center, Peabody, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Surgery, Lahey Hospital & Medical Center, Burlington, Massachusetts, USA.
Neuroophthalmology. 2024 Sep 12;49(1):60-68. doi: 10.1080/01658107.2024.2389934. eCollection 2025.
To report on the occurrence and characteristics of eye manifestations and determine the predictors of permanent vision loss (PVL) in patients with giant cell arteritis. Case-control study. Retrospective cohort study of 258 patients diagnosed with giant cell arteritis (GCA) over a 20- year period at a single institution. Eighty nine of 258 patients (34.5%) with GCA had vision symptoms and 56 (21.7%) developed PVL. Acute loss of vision with no preceding ocular symptoms occurred in 28.5%; for those with symptoms, median time to vision loss was 4.5 days. Bilateral clinical eye involvement was present in 38%, mostly anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION), rarely vascular occlusions. Vision loss was severe with acuity of count fingers or less or mean deficit -20 decibels or less in at least one eye in 80% of patients with PVL. Following initiation of GC treatment, 23% of patients continued to have further vision loss and only 5% showed improvement. We found predictors of PVL by multivariate analysis to be increased age (OR 1.05, p0.040), jaw claudication (OR 2.29, = .040), diplopia (OR 2.74, = .039), increased platelets (OR 2.98, = .020) and lower CRP (OR 0.63, = .004). We found there is a 27.3% decrease in the odds of having PVL when CRP value is doubled, keeping all other variables fixed. Permanent vision loss was 3.07 times more likely in the absence of polymyalgia rheumatica and 4.25 times more likely in patients without headaches. Ocular involvement in GCA is common, usually severe with little chance of recovery. Detailed analysis of visual acuity and visual field loss in our PVL cohort adds valuable data to the literature which lacks this information. Older patients with jaw claudication, diplopia, and increased platelets are at higher risk for permanent vision loss, especially when PMR and headache are absent and acute phase reactants lower.
报告巨细胞动脉炎患者眼部表现的发生情况及特征,并确定永久性视力丧失(PVL)的预测因素。病例对照研究。对一家机构在20年期间诊断为巨细胞动脉炎(GCA)的258例患者进行回顾性队列研究。258例GCA患者中有89例(34.5%)有视力症状,56例(21.7%)发生PVL。28.5%的患者出现无前驱眼部症状的急性视力丧失;有症状者视力丧失的中位时间为4.5天。38%的患者有双侧临床眼部受累,主要是前部缺血性视神经病变(AION),很少有血管闭塞。80%的PVL患者视力严重丧失,至少一只眼的视力为指数或更低,或平均视力缺损-20分贝或更低。开始使用糖皮质激素(GC)治疗后,23%的患者视力继续进一步丧失,只有5%的患者视力改善。通过多因素分析,我们发现PVL的预测因素为年龄增加(比值比[OR]1.05,p = 0.040)、颌部跛行(OR 2.29,p = 0.040)、复视(OR 2.74,p = 0.039)、血小板增多(OR 2.98,p = 0.020)和较低的C反应蛋白(CRP)(OR 0.63,p = 0.004)。我们发现,当CRP值翻倍且所有其他变量保持不变时,发生PVL的几率降低27.3%。在无风湿性多肌痛的情况下,永久性视力丧失的可能性增加3.07倍,在无头痛的患者中增加4.25倍。GCA患者的眼部受累很常见,通常很严重,恢复的机会很小。我们对PVL队列中的视力和视野丧失进行的详细分析为缺乏此类信息的文献增添了有价值的数据。有颌部跛行、复视和血小板增多的老年患者永久性视力丧失的风险更高,尤其是在无风湿性多肌痛和头痛且急性期反应物较低时。