Purpose: To analyze the referral patterns and the clinical and therapeutic features of patients diagnosed with uveitis in an Italian tertiary referral center to provide a comparison with previously published series from the same center.Methods: Retrospective retrieval of data on all new referrals to the Ocular Immunology Unit in Reggio Emilia (Italy) between November 2015 and April 2022 and comparison with previously published series from the same center.Results: Among the 1557 patients, the male-to-female ratio was 1:1.27. Anterior uveitis was the most common diagnosis (53.7%), followed by posterior (21.6%), pan- (18.5%), and intermediate (6.2%) uveitis. The most identifiable specific diagnoses were anterior herpetic uveitis (18.4%), Fuchs uveitis (12.8%), and tuberculosis (6.1%). Infectious etiologies were the most frequent (34.1%) and were more diffuse among non-Caucasian patients (p < 0.001), followed by systemic disease-associated uveitis (26.5%), and ocular-specific conditions (20%). Idiopathic uveitis accounted for 19.4% of cases. Fuchs uveitis presented the longest median diagnostic delay (21 months). Immunosuppressants were administered to 25.2% of patients. Antimetabolites, calcineurin inhibitors, and biologicals were prescribed to 18.4%, 3%, and 11.4% of cases, respectively. Compared to our previous reports, we observed a significant increase in foreign-born patients and in infectious uveitis, a decrease in idiopathic conditions, and an increasing use of non-biological and biological steroid-sparing drugs.Conclusions: The patterns of uveitis in Italy have been changing over the last 20 years, very likely due to migration flows. Diagnostic improvements and a more widespread interdisciplinary approach could reduce the incidence of idiopathic uveitis as well as diagnostic delay.

Reggio Emilia (Northern Italy) Interdisciplinary Uveitis Clinic: What We Have Learned in the Last 20 Years / Gentile, P.; Aldigeri, R.; Mastrofilippo, V.; Bolletta, E.; De Simone, L.; Gozzi, F.; Ragusa, E.; Ponti, L.; Adani, C.; Zanelli, M.; Belloni, L.; Bonacini, M.; Croci, S.; Zerbini, A.; De Maria, M.; Neri, A.; Vecchi, M.; Cappella, M.; Fastiggi, M.; De Fanti, A.; Citriniti, G.; Crescentini, F.; Galli, E.; Muratore, F.; Montepietra, S.; Contardi, G.; Massari, M.; Paci, M.; Facciolongo, N. C.; Beltrami, M.; Cavallini, G. M.; Salvarani, C.; Cimino, L.. - In: OCULAR IMMUNOLOGY AND INFLAMMATION. - ISSN 0927-3948. - 32:8(2024), pp. 1777-1787. [10.1080/09273948.2023.2296617]

Reggio Emilia (Northern Italy) Interdisciplinary Uveitis Clinic: What We Have Learned in the Last 20 Years

Gentile, P.;Ragusa, E.;Ponti, L.;Galli, E.;Muratore, F.;Cavallini, G. M.;Salvarani, C.;Cimino, L.
2024

Abstract

Purpose: To analyze the referral patterns and the clinical and therapeutic features of patients diagnosed with uveitis in an Italian tertiary referral center to provide a comparison with previously published series from the same center.Methods: Retrospective retrieval of data on all new referrals to the Ocular Immunology Unit in Reggio Emilia (Italy) between November 2015 and April 2022 and comparison with previously published series from the same center.Results: Among the 1557 patients, the male-to-female ratio was 1:1.27. Anterior uveitis was the most common diagnosis (53.7%), followed by posterior (21.6%), pan- (18.5%), and intermediate (6.2%) uveitis. The most identifiable specific diagnoses were anterior herpetic uveitis (18.4%), Fuchs uveitis (12.8%), and tuberculosis (6.1%). Infectious etiologies were the most frequent (34.1%) and were more diffuse among non-Caucasian patients (p < 0.001), followed by systemic disease-associated uveitis (26.5%), and ocular-specific conditions (20%). Idiopathic uveitis accounted for 19.4% of cases. Fuchs uveitis presented the longest median diagnostic delay (21 months). Immunosuppressants were administered to 25.2% of patients. Antimetabolites, calcineurin inhibitors, and biologicals were prescribed to 18.4%, 3%, and 11.4% of cases, respectively. Compared to our previous reports, we observed a significant increase in foreign-born patients and in infectious uveitis, a decrease in idiopathic conditions, and an increasing use of non-biological and biological steroid-sparing drugs.Conclusions: The patterns of uveitis in Italy have been changing over the last 20 years, very likely due to migration flows. Diagnostic improvements and a more widespread interdisciplinary approach could reduce the incidence of idiopathic uveitis as well as diagnostic delay.
2024
32
8
1777
1787
Reggio Emilia (Northern Italy) Interdisciplinary Uveitis Clinic: What We Have Learned in the Last 20 Years / Gentile, P.; Aldigeri, R.; Mastrofilippo, V.; Bolletta, E.; De Simone, L.; Gozzi, F.; Ragusa, E.; Ponti, L.; Adani, C.; Zanelli, M.; Belloni, L.; Bonacini, M.; Croci, S.; Zerbini, A.; De Maria, M.; Neri, A.; Vecchi, M.; Cappella, M.; Fastiggi, M.; De Fanti, A.; Citriniti, G.; Crescentini, F.; Galli, E.; Muratore, F.; Montepietra, S.; Contardi, G.; Massari, M.; Paci, M.; Facciolongo, N. C.; Beltrami, M.; Cavallini, G. M.; Salvarani, C.; Cimino, L.. - In: OCULAR IMMUNOLOGY AND INFLAMMATION. - ISSN 0927-3948. - 32:8(2024), pp. 1777-1787. [10.1080/09273948.2023.2296617]
Gentile, P.; Aldigeri, R.; Mastrofilippo, V.; Bolletta, E.; De Simone, L.; Gozzi, F.; Ragusa, E.; Ponti, L.; Adani, C.; Zanelli, M.; Belloni, L.; Bona...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1362027
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