AI Article Synopsis

  • Uveitides are over 30 diseases causing inflammation in the eye, often treated with oral corticosteroids and immunosuppressants, complicating clinical trials due to their rarity and diverse characteristics.
  • Many trials have faced challenges with efficacy measures, leading to unclear results and difficulties in recruitment due to the need for a specific outcome measure for each disease.
  • A promising approach involves using a single outcome focusing on successful corticosteroid sparing (inactive uveitis with low prednisone) to streamline assessment, which is currently being tested in the ADVISE Trial.

Article Abstract

The uveitides consist of >30 diseases characterized by intraocular inflammation. Noninfectious intermediate, posterior, and panuveitides typically are treated with oral corticosteroids and immunosuppression, with a similar treatment approach for most diseases. Because these uveitides collectively are considered a rare disease, single-disease trials are difficult to impractical to recruit for, and most trials have included several different diseases for a given protocol treatment. However, measures of uveitis activity are disease specific, resulting in challenges for trial outcome measures. Several trials of investigational immunosuppressive drugs or biologic drugs have not demonstrated efficacy, but design problems with the outcome measures have limited the ability to interpret the results. Successful trials have included diseases for which a single uveitis activity measure suffices or a composite measure of uveitis activity is used. One potential solution to this problem is the use of a single, clinically relevant outcome, successful corticosteroid sparing, defined as inactive uveitis with a prednisone dose ≤7.5 mg/day coupled with disease-specific guidelines for determining inactive disease. The clinical relevance of this outcome is that active uveitis is associated with increased risks of visual impairment and blindness, and that prednisone doses ≤7.5 mg/day have a minimal risk of corticosteroid side effects. The consequence of this approach is that trial visits require a core set of measures for all participants and a disease-specific set of measures, both clinical and imaging, to assess uveitis activity. This approach is being used in the Adalimumab Versus Conventional Immunosuppression (ADVISE) Trial.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10362938PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/epirev/mxac001DOI Listing

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