TY - JOUR
T1 - Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada-like disease secondary to anticancer treatment
T2 - a multicentre case series
AU - Urzua, Cristhian A.
AU - Olate-Perez, Alvaro
AU - Anguita, Rodrigo
AU - Schlaen, Ariel
AU - Munk, Marion R.
AU - Carreño, Ester
AU - Garza-Leon, Manuel
AU - Sainz-de-la-Maza, Maite
AU - Adan, Alfredo
AU - Takeuchi, Masaru
AU - Pavesio, Carlos
AU - Sabat, Pablo E.
AU - Labbe, Eduardo
AU - Duarte, Gonzalo
AU - Couto, Cristobal
AU - Cuitino, Loreto
AU - Arellanes-Garcia, Lourdes
AU - Fuseau, Michelle
AU - Cairoli, Ernesto
AU - Vidal, Rodrigo
AU - Curi, Andre
AU - de-la-Torre, Alejandra
AU - Concha-del-Rio, Luz Elena
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Royal College of Ophthalmologists 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Objective: To describe the clinical features of a case series of patients with Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH)-like disease secondary to anticancer treatment. Methods: Retrospective, non-interventional multicentre case-series study. Seventeen patients (34 eyes) with VKH-like disease secondary to anticancer treatment, seen between 2014 and 2023. Main outcome measures were patients’ extraocular and ophthalmic clinical features, treatment, visual outcome, and complications. Results: Fourteen out of 17 patients presented with skin melanoma. The main anticancer therapies were BRAF/MEK inhibitor (8/17 patients) and PD1 inhibitor (4/17 patients). Fifteen patients presented with ocular symptoms within 16 weeks after initiating anticancer therapy. Most of the eyes exhibited anterior chamber cells (n = 30), flare (n = 20), and vitritis (n = 11). All patients had subretinal fluid, and 24/34 eyes had foveal involvement. The mean subfoveal choroidal thickness measured by EDI-OCT was 483.42 ± 262.46 µm. In 12 cases, the oncology team decided to stop the anticancer therapy, and all but one patient was treated with high-dose oral corticosteroids for a median of 16 weeks. At the last follow-up visit, control of ocular inflammation had been achieved in 16 cases (median follow-up: 62 weeks, range 16–104 weeks). The most common complications were cataract and ocular hypertension (10 patients). Conclusions: VKH-like features in the context of emerging novel anticancer therapies represent a unique clinical phenotype in which the cornerstone of management should include high doses of systemic corticosteroids, using immunomodulatory therapy as a second-line treatment in patients with a refractory disorder. In addition, a comprehensive multidisciplinary approach, including an oncologist, should consider the safety of anticancer treatment cessation.
AB - Objective: To describe the clinical features of a case series of patients with Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH)-like disease secondary to anticancer treatment. Methods: Retrospective, non-interventional multicentre case-series study. Seventeen patients (34 eyes) with VKH-like disease secondary to anticancer treatment, seen between 2014 and 2023. Main outcome measures were patients’ extraocular and ophthalmic clinical features, treatment, visual outcome, and complications. Results: Fourteen out of 17 patients presented with skin melanoma. The main anticancer therapies were BRAF/MEK inhibitor (8/17 patients) and PD1 inhibitor (4/17 patients). Fifteen patients presented with ocular symptoms within 16 weeks after initiating anticancer therapy. Most of the eyes exhibited anterior chamber cells (n = 30), flare (n = 20), and vitritis (n = 11). All patients had subretinal fluid, and 24/34 eyes had foveal involvement. The mean subfoveal choroidal thickness measured by EDI-OCT was 483.42 ± 262.46 µm. In 12 cases, the oncology team decided to stop the anticancer therapy, and all but one patient was treated with high-dose oral corticosteroids for a median of 16 weeks. At the last follow-up visit, control of ocular inflammation had been achieved in 16 cases (median follow-up: 62 weeks, range 16–104 weeks). The most common complications were cataract and ocular hypertension (10 patients). Conclusions: VKH-like features in the context of emerging novel anticancer therapies represent a unique clinical phenotype in which the cornerstone of management should include high doses of systemic corticosteroids, using immunomodulatory therapy as a second-line treatment in patients with a refractory disorder. In addition, a comprehensive multidisciplinary approach, including an oncologist, should consider the safety of anticancer treatment cessation.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41433-025-03720-6
DO - 10.1038/s41433-025-03720-6
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105000069832
SN - 0950-222X
JO - Eye (Basingstoke)
JF - Eye (Basingstoke)
M1 - 29
ER -