Uveitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
First-line Antimetabolites as Steroid-sparing Treatment Uveitis Pilot Trial
The proposed study is a masked trial, with stratified block randomization by site, designed
to determine which treatment, methotrexate or mycophenolate mofetil, is more effective as
first-line steroid-sparing treatment for patients with non-infectious uveitis requiring
corticosteroid-sparing therapy.
One hundred non-infectious uveitis patients in need of corticosteroid-sparing therapy will
be randomized to receive either oral methotrexate or oral mycophenolate mofetil at Aravind
Eye Hospitals (Madurai and Coimbatore, South India). They will be followed monthly for 6
months after enrollment or until treatment failure. The investigators hypothesize that the
proportion achieving corticosteroid-sparing success at 6 months for patients taking
mycophenolate mofetil will be improved in comparison with patients taking methotrexate.
Uveitis, a set of conditions defined by intraocular inflammation, is a significant cause of
vision loss and morbidity in the United States and the world. The incidence was recently
estimated to be more than 50 cases per 100,000 person-years, with a prevalence of
approximately 115 per 100,000 persons. Additionally, uveitis is believed to be the cause of
up to 10% of cases of legal blindness in the United States, or approximately 30,000 new
cases of blindness per year. In contrast to common age-related eye disorders, uveitis may
have a stronger socio-economic impact because it disproportionately affects younger
working-age patients. Although the etiology of uveitis is varied, most cases are presumed to
be immune-mediated and lack a known infectious cause. Even in developing countries such as
India that have a larger burden of infection, the vast majority of cases are non-infectious.
The current mainstay of treatment for noninfectious uveitis is corticosteroids (topical,
systemic, locally injected, or corticosteroid-eluting implants). Due to the well documented
local and systemic side effects associated with corticosteroid therapy, other
immunosuppressive therapies are frequently used as corticosteroid-sparing agents in patients
who need long-term therapy. These include antimetabolites, calcineurin inhibitors,
alkylating agents, and biologic drugs. Cost and morbidity associated with uncontrolled
inflammation make the selection of an effective initial steroid-sparing agent extremely
important.
It is common practice for patients requiring a steroid-sparing agent to be treated first
with the less expensive methotrexate and then switched to mycophenolate mofetil in the event
of treatment failure. However, results from non-comparative retrospective case series
indicate that uveitis patients may be much more likely to achieve controlled inflammation
and tolerate treatment with mycophenolate mofetil. Furthermore, approximately half of the
patients who fail treatment with methotrexate go on to successful treatment with
mycophenolate mofetil. There have been no prospective randomized, controlled trials to
systematically determine which antimetabolite is more clinically efficacious as initial
corticosteroid-sparing therapy, making it difficult for clinicians to make informed,
evidence-based decisions about first-line immunosuppressive treatment.
Our contribution is expected to be a definitive understanding of the comparative efficacy,
tolerability, and quality of life of these two antimetabolites as initial steroid-sparing
therapy for uveitis patients requiring chronic therapy. This contribution is significant
because it will enable clinicians to make evidence-based decisions when prescribing
first-line immunosuppressive therapy for their uveitis patients. The use of optimal
first-line therapy will improve quality of life by reducing the risk of vision loss and
complications associated with uncontrolled ocular inflammation and long-term corticosteroid
use.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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