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Home | News | Links | How to Help | Contact Us | Search Patient Information: Articles: Articles for Patients: Uveitis and Ocular Inflammatory Disease Treatment: Chemotherapy: Risks and OutcomesC. Stephen Foster, M.D. Inflammatory eye disease has blinded countless
numbers of individuals during both ancient and modern times. And
while most of such instances have occurred on the basis of
infectious inflammation, not a trivial number of instances has
occurred on the basis of autoimmune inflammation. A revolution in
care of such patients occurred in 1950, with the introduction of
corticosteroid therapy, both systemic and topical, for autoimmune
inflammation, including ocular inflammation. Within a decade,
however, it became clear that the chronic use of corticosteroids
for patients with chronic autoimmune inflammatory eye disease
resulted in unacceptable side effects, including cataract and
glaucoma. Some pioneers, such as Frank Newell, Vernon Wong, James
Gills, Richard OConnor and others began to explore the
risk/benefit ratio or equation of nonsteroidal immunomodulatory
medication in the care of such individuals. Enormous progress has
been made in this area since work of these early pioneers, and
today ocular immunologists and other knowledgeable physicians
aquainted with the proper use of immunosuppressive
chemotherapeutic medications in the care of patients with
progressive, blinding autoimmune inflammatory disease, routinely
use this strategy to wonderful effect, preventing the blinding
consequences that were occurring or would have otherwise obtained
had such medications not been employed. 2. Wallace CA, Bleyer A, Sherry DD, et al: Toxicity and Serum Levels of Methotrexate in Children with Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis. Arthritis and Rheumatism. 32(6):677, 1989. 3. Dana MR, Merayo-Lloves J, Schaumberg D, et al: Visual Outcomes Prognosticators in Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis-associated Uveitis. Ophthalmology. 104(2):236, 1997. 4. Graham LD, Myones BL, Rivas-Chacon RF, et al: Morbidity associated with long-term methotrexate therapy in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. The Journal of Pediatrics. 120(3):468, 1992. 5. Hemady RK, Baer JC, Foster CS. Immunosuppressive Drugs in the Management of Progressive Corticosteroid-Resistant Uveitis Associated with Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis. Controversies in Ophthalmology In: International Ophthalmology Clinics (Ed. Frederick A. Jakobiec, M.D.) Little Brown and Company, Boston, Massachusetts 32(3): Summer 1992. 6. Singh G, Fries JF, Spitz P, et al: Toxic Effects of Azathioprine in Rheumatoid Arthritis. A National Post-Marketing Perspective. Arthritis and Rheumatism. 32(7):837, 1989. 7. Weinblatt ME, Coblyn JS, Fraser PA, et al: Cyclosporin A Treatment of Refractory Rheumatoid Arthritis. Arthritis and Rheumatism. 30(1):11, 1987. 8. Sandoval DM, Alarcon GS, Morgan SL. Adverse events in methotrexate-treated rheumatoid arthritis patients. British Journal of Ophthalmology. 34 Suppl 2:49, 1995. 9. Salach RH, Cash JM: Methotrexate: the emerging drug of choice for serious rheumatoid arthritis. Clinical Therapeutics. 16(6):912, 1994. 10. Shiroky JB. Combination sulfasalazine and methotrexate in the management of rheumatoid arthritis. Journal of Rheumatology. Supplement 44:69, 1996. 11. Petrazzuoli M, Rothe NJ, Grin-Jorgensen C, et
al: Monitoring patients taking methotrexate for hepatoxicity.
Does the standard of care match published guidelines? Journal
of American Academy of Dermatology. 31(6):969, 1994. |
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