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Risk factors for hydroxychloroquine retinopathy in systemic lupus erythematosus: a case–control study with hydroxychloroquine blood-level analysis
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Abstract
Objective
HCQ is an essential medication in SLE, proven to lengthen survival and reduce flares. Its use, however, is limited by its rare but severe ophthalmological complications. Here, we aimed to analyse factors associated with HCQ retinopathy including HCQ blood levels.
Methods
This case–control study compared SLE patients with and without HCQ retinopathy, defined by abnormal results for at least two of the following ophthalmological tests: automated visual fields, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), multifocal electroretinogram (mfERG) and fundus autofluorescence. We compared clinical and laboratory findings to assess risk factors for HCQ retinopathy.
Results
The study included 23 patients with confirmed retinopathy (cases) and 547 controls. In the univariate analysis, age (P < 0.001), height (P = 0.045), creatinine clearance (P < 0.001), haemoglobin concentration (P = 0.01), duration of HCQ intake, (P < 0.001), higher cumulative HCQ dose (P < 0.001) and geographical origin (West Indies and sub-Saharan Africa) (P = 0.007) were associated with the risk of retinopathy, while HCQ blood levels were not. In the multivariate analysis, only cumulative dose (P = 0.016), duration of intake (P = 0.039), creatinine clearance (P = 0.002) and geographical origin (P < 0.0001, odds ratio 8.7) remained significantly associated with retinopathy.
Conclusion
SLE patients on HCQ should be closely monitored for retinopathy, especially those from the West Indies or sub-Saharan Africa, or with renal insufficiency, longer HCQ intake or a high cumulative dose. Although reducing the daily dose of HCQ in patients with persistently high HCQ blood levels seems logical, these concentrations were not associated with retinopathy in this study with controls adherent to treatment.
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Tiphaine Lenfant
Sawsen Salah
Gaëlle Leroux
Elodie Bousquet
Véronique Le Guern
François Chasset
Camille Francès
Nathalie Morel
Julie Chezel
Thomas Papo
Patrice Cacoub
Luc Mouthon
Gaëlle Guettrot-Imbert
Pascal Cohen
Alexis Régent
Martine Mauget-Faÿsse
Jean-Charles Piette
Moez Jallouli
Nathalie Costedoat-Chalumeau
F Ackermann
Z Amoura
B Asli
Leonardo Astudillo
O Aumaître
Cristina Belizna
Nadia Belmatoug
Olivier Benveniste
Audrey Benyamine
Holly Bezanahary
B Blanchet
Patrick Blanco
Olivier Bletry
Bahram Bodaghi
Pierre Bourgeois
Benoît Brihaye
Emmanuel Chatelus
J Cohen-Bittan
Richard Damade
Eric Daugas
Christian De-Gennes
Jean-François Delfraissy
Céline Delluc
Aurélien Delluc
H Desmurs-Clavel
Pierre Duhaut
Alain Dupuy
Isabelle Durieu
E A Hang-Korng
Olivier Fain
Dominique Farge
Christian Funck-Brentano
L Galicier
Frédérique Gandjbakhch
Justine Gellen-Dautremer
Pascale Ghillani-Dalbin
Bertrand Godeau
Cécile Goujard
Catherine Grandpeix
Claire Grange
Lamiae Grimaldi
Loïc Guillevin
Eric Hachulla
Jean-robert Harle
Julien Haroche
Pierre Hausfater
J-S Hulot
Jean Jouquan
Gilles Kaplanski
Homa Keshtmand
J-E Kahn
Mehdi Khellaf
Olivier Lambotte
David Launay
D Le Thi Huong
Philippe Lechat
Hervé Levesque
Olivier Lidove
F Liote
Eric Liozon
L Y Kim
Matthieu Mahevas
Kubéraka Mariampillai
Xavier Mariette
Alexis Mathian
Karin Mazodier
Marc Michel
Lucile Musset
Rokiya Ngack
Jacques Ninet
Eric Oksenhendler
Jean-Luc Pellegrin
L Perard
Olivier Peyr
Anne-Marie Piette
Vincent Poindron
J Pourrat
Fabienne Roux
David Saadoun
K Sacre
Sabrinel Sahali
L Sailler
Bernadette Saint-Marcoux
Françoise Sarrot-Reynauld
J Sellam
Yoland Schoindre
Damien Sene
Jacques Serratrice
Aude Servais
Pascal Seve
Jean Sibilia
Claude Simon
A Smail
Christelle Sordet
J Stirnemann
Benjamin Terrier
Salim Trad
Jean-François Viallard
Elisabeth Vidal
Bertrand Wechsler
Pierre-Jean Weiller
N Zahr
Title: Risk factors for hydroxychloroquine retinopathy in systemic lupus erythematosus: a case–control study with hydroxychloroquine blood-level analysis
Description:
Abstract
Objective
HCQ is an essential medication in SLE, proven to lengthen survival and reduce flares.
Its use, however, is limited by its rare but severe ophthalmological complications.
Here, we aimed to analyse factors associated with HCQ retinopathy including HCQ blood levels.
Methods
This case–control study compared SLE patients with and without HCQ retinopathy, defined by abnormal results for at least two of the following ophthalmological tests: automated visual fields, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), multifocal electroretinogram (mfERG) and fundus autofluorescence.
We compared clinical and laboratory findings to assess risk factors for HCQ retinopathy.
Results
The study included 23 patients with confirmed retinopathy (cases) and 547 controls.
In the univariate analysis, age (P < 0.
001), height (P = 0.
045), creatinine clearance (P < 0.
001), haemoglobin concentration (P = 0.
01), duration of HCQ intake, (P < 0.
001), higher cumulative HCQ dose (P < 0.
001) and geographical origin (West Indies and sub-Saharan Africa) (P = 0.
007) were associated with the risk of retinopathy, while HCQ blood levels were not.
In the multivariate analysis, only cumulative dose (P = 0.
016), duration of intake (P = 0.
039), creatinine clearance (P = 0.
002) and geographical origin (P < 0.
0001, odds ratio 8.
7) remained significantly associated with retinopathy.
Conclusion
SLE patients on HCQ should be closely monitored for retinopathy, especially those from the West Indies or sub-Saharan Africa, or with renal insufficiency, longer HCQ intake or a high cumulative dose.
Although reducing the daily dose of HCQ in patients with persistently high HCQ blood levels seems logical, these concentrations were not associated with retinopathy in this study with controls adherent to treatment.
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