Structural Endpoints and Outcome Measures in Uveitis

Author:

Wintergerst Maximilian W.M.ORCID,Liu Xiaoxuan,Terheyden Jan H.,Pohlmann Dominika,Li Jeany Q.ORCID,Montesano Giovanni,Ometto Giovanni,Holz Frank G.,Crabb David P.,Pleyer Uwe,Heinz Carsten,Denniston Alastair K.,Finger Robert P.

Abstract

Most uveitis entities are rare diseases but, taken together, are responsible for 5–10% of worldwide visual impairment which largely affects persons of working age. As with many rare diseases, there is a lack of high-level evidence regarding its clinical management, partly due to a dearth of reliable and objective quantitative endpoints for clinical trials. This review provides an overview of available structural outcome measures for uveitis disease activity and damage in an anatomical order from the anterior to the posterior segment of the eye. While there is a multitude of available structural outcome measures, not all might qualify as endpoints for clinical uveitis trials, and thorough testing of applicability is warranted. Furthermore, a consensus on endpoint definition, standardization, and “core outcomes” is required. As stipulated by regulatory agencies, endpoints should be precisely defined, clinically important, internally consistent, reliable, responsive to treatment, and relevant for the respective subtype of uveitis. Out of all modalities used for assessment of the reviewed structural outcome measures, optical coherence tomography, color fundus photography, fundus autofluorescence, and fluorescein/indocyanine green angiography represent current “core modalities” for reliable and objective quantification of uveitis outcome measures, based on their practical availability and the evidence provided so far.

Publisher

S. Karger AG

Subject

Sensory Systems,Ophthalmology,General Medicine

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