18 results on '"Eduardo Uchiyama"'
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2. Efficacy, durability, and safety of intravitreal faricimab with extended dosing up to every 16 weeks in patients with diabetic macular oedema (YOSEMITE and RHINE): two randomised, double-masked, phase 3 trials
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Charles C Wykoff, Francis Abreu, Anthony P Adamis, Karen Basu, David A Eichenbaum, Zdenka Haskova, Hugh Lin, Anat Loewenstein, Shaun Mohan, Ian A Pearce, Taiji Sakamoto, Patricio G Schlottmann, David Silverman, Jennifer K Sun, John A Wells, Jeffrey R Willis, Ramin Tadayoni, Thomas Aaberg, Ashkan Abbey, Elmira Abdulaeva, Santiago Abengoechea, Prema Abraham, Thomas Ach, Serrhel Adams, Alfredo Adan Civera, Sean Adrean, Hansjurgen Agostini, Suhail Alam, Arturo Alezzandrini, Virgil Alfaro, Daniel Aliseda, Arghavan Almony, Pedro Amat, Payam Amini, Andrew Antoszyk, Luis Arias, Riaz Asaria, Marcos Avila, Carl C Awh, Joaquin Bafalluy, Carl Baker, Francesco Bandello, Mark Barakat, Karen Barraza, Gyorgy Bator, Caroline Baumal, Rubens Belfort Jr, Chris Bergstrom, George Bertolucci, Thomas Bochow, Matthias Bolz, Emilia Borcz, Arnaldo Bordon, David Boyer, Galina Bratko, Michael Brent, Jamin Brown, David M Brown, Maria Budzinskaya, Sylvia Buffet, Stuart Burgess, Ben Burton, Miguel Busquets, Francisco Cabrera, Carlo Cagini, Jorge Calzada, Peter Campochiaro, John Carlson, Alessandro Castellarin, Carlos Cava, Voraporn Chaikitmongkol, Clement Chan, Emmanuel Chang, Jonathan Chang, Andrew Chang, Steve Charles, Nauman Chaudhry, Caroline Chee, Judy Chen, Fred Chen, Shih-Jen Chen, Richard Cheong-Leen, Allen Chiang, Mark Chittum, David Chow, Brian Connolly, Pierre Loic Cornut, Karl Csaky, Carl Danzig, Arup Das, Vesselin Daskalov, Carmen Desco, Amr Dessouki, John Dickinson, Brian Do, Michael Dollin, Pravin Dugel, Jaroslava Dusova, David Eichenbaum, Bora Eldem, Robert Engstrom, Jan Ernest, Joan Josep Escobar, Simona Esposti, Nicole Eter, Naomi Falk, Andrej Farkas, Leonard Feiner, Nicolas Feltgen, Carlos Fernandez, Alvaro Fernandez Vega, Philip Ferrone, Joao Figueira, Marta Figueroa, Oliver Findl, Howard Fine, Jorge Fortun, Gregory M Fox, Scott Foxman, Carsten Framme, Samantha Fraser-Bell, Arthur Fu, Akira Fukutomi, Nicholas Fung, Federico Furno Sola, Roberto Gallego-Pinazo, Renata Garcia, Alfredo Garcia-Layana, Maciej Gawecki, Sheen George, Faruque Ghanchi, Ghassan Ghorayeb, Roger Goldberg, Michaella Goldstein, Nuno Gomes, Francisco Gomez Ulla, Victor Gonzalez, Craig Greven, Sunil Gupta, Miguel Guzman, Martin Harris, Katja Hatz, Vivienne Hau, Vincent Hau, Ken Hayashi, Jeffrey Heier, Ewa Herba, Vrinda Hershberger, Patrick Higgins, Akito Hirakata, Allen Ho, Nancy Holekamp, Shigeru Honda, Jason Hsu, Allen Hu, Maria Hurcikova, Yasuhiro Ikeda, Ricky Isernhagen, Yasuki Ito, Tim Jackson, Rachael Jacoby, Afsar Jafree, Golnaz Javey, Cameron Javid, Chirag Jhaveri, Mark Johnson, Marek Kacerík, Jakub Kaluzny, Daniel Kampik, Se Woong Kang, Kapil Kapoor, Levent Karabas, Tsutomu Kawasaki, Agnes Kerenyi, Arshad Khanani, Rahul Khurana, Brian Kim, Kazuhiro Kimura, Genichiro Kishino, Shigehiko Kitano, Kendra Klein-Mascia, Gregg Kokame, Jean Francois Korobelnik, Alexey Kulikov, Ajay Kuriyan, Henry Kwong, Robert Kwun, Timothy Lai, Chi-Chun Lai, Philip Laird, Laurent Lalonde, Paolo Lanzetta, Michael Larsen, Caroline Laugesen, Daniel Lavinsky, Olivier Lebreton, Seong Lee, Jaime Levy, Blandina Lipkova, Mimi Liu, Judy Liu, Chris P Lohmann, Nikolas London, Katrin Lorenz, Andrew Lotery, David Lozano Rechy, Silvio Lujan, Patrick Ma, Takatoshi Maeno, Sajjad Mahmood, Fuad Makkouk, Khurram Malik, Dennis Marcus, Alan Margherio, Leonardo Mastropasqua, Raj Maturi, Frank McCabe, Martin McKibbin, Hemal Mehta, Geeta Menon, Jale Mentes, Katarzyna Michalska-Malecka, Aneta Misheva, Yoshinori Mitamura, Paul Mitchell, Yasha Modi, Quresh Mohamed, Javier Montero, Jeffrey Moore, Virgilio Morales Canton, Haia Morori-Katz, Tatiana Morugova, Tomoaki Murakami, Maria Muzyka-Wozniak, Marco Nardi, Jan Nemcansky, Kamila Nester-Ostrowska, Julio Neto, Charles Newell, Massimo Nicolo, Jared Nielsen, Kousuke Noda, Akira Obana, Nahoko Ogata, Hideyasu Oh, Kean Oh, Matthew Ohr, Piotr Oleksy, Scott Oliver, Sebastien Olivier, James Osher, Sehnaz Ozcalişkan, Banu Ozturk, Andras Papp, Kyu Hyung Park, D Wilkin Parke, Maria Cristina Parravano, Sugat Patel, Sunil Patel, Ian Pearce, Joel Pearlman, Fernando Penha, Irfan Perente, Stephen Perkins, Grazia Pertile, Iva Petkova, Tunde Peto, Dante Pieramici, Andreas Pollreisz, Pear Pongsachareonnont, Nadezhda Pozdeyeva, Siegfried Priglinger, Jawad Qureshi, Dorota Raczynska, Rajesh Rajagopalan, Juan Ramirez Estudillo, Paul Raskauskas, Rajiv Rathod, Hessam Razavi, Carl Regillo, Federico Ricci, Soraya Rofagha, Dominika Romanczak, Bożena Romanowska-Dixon, Daniel Rosberger, Irit Rosenblatt, Brett Rosenblatt, Adam Ross, Paisan Ruamviboonsuk, Jose Maria Ruiz Moreno, Gustavo Salomão, Sukhpal Sandhu, Dirk Sandner, Laura Sararols, Osamu Sawada, Ramin Schadlu, Patricio Schlottmann, Claudia Schuart, Berthold Seitz, András Seres, Figen Sermet, Sandeep Shah, Ankur Shah, Rohan Shah, Sumit Sharma, Thomas Sheidow, Veeral Sheth, Akito Shimouchi, Masahiko Shimura, Bartosz Sikorski, Rufino Silva, Michael Singer, Lawrence Singerman, Rishi Singh, Eric Souied, David J Spinak, Georg Spital, Nathan Steinle, Jeffrey Stern, Glenn Stoller, Robert Stoltz, Cameron Stone, Amy Stone, Eric Suan, Masahiko Sugimoto, Iichiro Sugita, Jennifer Sun, Xiaodong Sun, Ivan Suner, Lajos Szalczer, Timea Szecsko, Ali Tabassian, Hitoshi Takagi, Kei Takayama, Alexandre Taleb, James Talks, Gavin Tan, Teruyo Tanabe, Stanford Taylor, Allen Thach, John Thompson, Paul Tlucek, Robert Torti, Daniela Tosheva Guneva, Edit Toth-Molnar, Eduardo Uchiyama, Attila Vajas, Deepali Varma, Balazs Varsanyi, Petja Vassileva, Sara Vaz-Pereira, Miroslav Veith, Jose Ignacio Vela, Francesco Viola, Gianni Virgili, Gábor Vogt, Henrik Vorum, Pamela Weber, Thoalf Wecke, Raymond Wee, Martin Weger, Paul Weishaar, Sanjeewa Wickremasinghe, Thomas Reginald Williams, Thomas Williams, Geoff Williams, Armin Wolf, Jeremy Wolfe, James Wong, David Wong, Ian Wong, Robert Wong, Bogumil Wowra, Edward Wylęgała, Chang-Hao Yang, Tsutomu Yasukawa, Paul Yates, Gursel Yilmaz, Glenn Yiu, Young Hee Yoon, Barak Yoreh, Shigeo Yoshida, Hyeong Gon Yu, Seung Young Yu, Tatiana Yurieva, Leandro Zacharias, Karolina Zaczek Zakrzewska, Alberto Zambrano, Barbara Zatorska, Carlos Zeolite, and Jeffrey Zheutlin
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Male ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Visual Acuity ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Angiopoietin-2 ,Receptors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Antibodies, Bispecific ,Intravitreal Injections ,Edema ,Humans ,Female ,Macula Lutea ,Aged - Abstract
To reduce treatment burden and optimise patient outcomes in diabetic macular oedema, we present 1-year results from two phase 3 trials of faricimab, a novel angiopoietin-2 and vascular endothelial growth factor-A bispecific antibody.YOSEMITE and RHINE were randomised, double-masked, non-inferiority trials across 353 sites worldwide. Adults with vision loss due to centre-involving diabetic macular oedema were randomly assigned (1:1:1) to intravitreal faricimab 6·0 mg every 8 weeks, faricimab 6·0 mg per personalised treatment interval (PTI), or aflibercept 2·0 mg every 8 weeks up to week 100. PTI dosing intervals were extended, maintained, or reduced (every 4 weeks up to every 16 weeks) based on disease activity at active dosing visits. The primary endpoint was mean change in best-corrected visual acuity at 1 year, averaged over weeks 48, 52, and 56. Efficacy analyses included the intention-to-treat population (non-inferiority margin 4 Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study [ETDRS] letters); safety analyses included patients with at least one dose of study treatment. These trials are registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (YOSEMITE NCT03622580 and RHINE NCT03622593).3247 patients were screened for eligibility in YOSEMITE (n=1532) and RHINE (n=1715). After exclusions, 940 patients were enrolled into YOSEMITE between Sept 5, 2018, and Sept 19, 2019, and 951 patients were enrolled into RHINE between Oct 9, 2018, and Sept 20, 2019. These 1891 patients were randomly assigned to faricimab every 8 weeks (YOSEMITE n=315, RHINE n=317), faricimab PTI (n=313, n=319), or aflibercept every 8 weeks (n=312, n=315). Non-inferiority for the primary endpoint was achieved with faricimab every 8 weeks (adjusted mean vs aflibercept every 8 weeks in YOSEMITE 10·7 ETDRS letters [97·52% CI 9·4 to 12·0] vs 10·9 ETDRS letters [9·6 to 12·2], difference -0·2 ETDRS letters [-2·0 to 1·6]; RHINE 11·8 ETDRS letters [10·6 to 13·0] vs 10·3 ETDRS letters [9·1 to 11·4] letters, difference 1·5 ETDRS letters [-0·1 to 3·2]) and faricimab PTI (YOSEMITE 11·6 ETDRS letters [10·3 to 12·9], difference 0·7 ETDRS letters [-1·1 to 2·5]; RHINE 10·8 ETDRS letters [9·6 to 11·9], difference 0·5 ETDRS letters [-1·1 to 2·1]). Incidence of ocular adverse events was comparable between faricimab every 8 weeks (YOSEMITE n=98 [31%], RHINE n=137 [43%]), faricimab PTI (n=106 [34%], n=119 [37%]), and aflibercept every 8 weeks (n=102 [33%], n=113 [36%]).Robust vision gains and anatomical improvements with faricimab were achieved with adjustable dosing up to every 16 weeks, demonstrating the potential for faricimab to extend the durability of treatment for patients with diabetic macular oedema.F Hoffmann-La Roche.
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- 2022
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3. Efficacy, durability, and safety of intravitreal faricimab up to every 16 weeks for neovascular age-related macular degeneration (TENAYA and LUCERNE): two randomised, double-masked, phase 3, non-inferiority trials
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Jeffrey S Heier, Arshad M Khanani, Carlos Quezada Ruiz, Karen Basu, Philip J Ferrone, Christopher Brittain, Marta S Figueroa, Hugh Lin, Frank G Holz, Vaibhavi Patel, Timothy Y Y Lai, David Silverman, Carl Regillo, Balakumar Swaminathan, Francesco Viola, Chui Ming Gemmy Cheung, Tien Y Wong, Ashkan Abbey, Elmira Abdulaeva, Prema Abraham, Alfredo Adan Civera, Hansjurgen Agostini, Arturo Alezzandrini, Virgil Alfaro, Arghavan Almony, Lebriz Altay, Payam Amini, Andrew Antoszyk, Etelka Aradi, Luis Arias, Jennifer Arnold, Riaz Asaria, Sergei Astakhov, Yury Astakhov, Carl C. Awh, Chandra Balaratnasingam, Sanjiv Banerjee, Caroline Baumal, Matthias Becker, Rubens Belfort, Galina Bratko, William Jr. Z Bridges, Jamin Brown, David M. Brown, Maria Budzinskaya, Sylvia Buffet, Stuart Burgess, Iksoo Byon, Carlo Cagini, Jorge Calzada, Stone Cameron, Peter Campochiaro, John Carlson, Angela Carneiro, Clement Chan, Emmanuel Chang, Andrew Chang, Daniel Chao, Nauman Chaudhry, Caroline Chee, Andrew Cheek, Shih-Jen Chen, San-Ni Chen, Gemmy Cheung, Saradha Chexal, Mark Chittum, David Chow, Abosede Cole, Brian Connolly, Pierre Loic Cornut, Stephen Couvillion, Carl Danzig, Vesselin Daskalov, Amr Dessouki, Francois Devin, Michael Dollin, Rosa Dolz, Louise Downey, Richard Dreyer, Pravin Dugel, David Eichenbaum, Bora Eldem, Robert Engstrom, Joan Josep Escobar, Nicole Eter, David W. Faber, Naomi Falk, Leonard Feiner, Alvaro Fernandez Vega, Philip Ferrone, Marta Figueroa, Howard Fine, Mitchell Fineman, Gregory M. Fox, Catherine Francais, Pablo Franco, Samantha Fraser-Bell, Nicholas Fung, Federico Furno Sola, Richard Gale, Alfredo Garcia-Layana, Julie Gasperini, Maciej Gawecki, Faruque Ghanchi, Manjot Gill, Michel Giunta, David Glaser, Michaella Goldstein, Francisco Gomez Ulla, Fumi Gomi, Victor Gonzalez, Jordan Graff, Sunil Gupta, Rainer Guthoff, Robyn Guymer, Anton Haas, Robert Hampton, Katja Hatz, Ken Hayashi, Jeffrey Heier, Ewa Herba, Vrinda Hershberger, Patrick Higgins, Nancy Holekamp, Shigeru Honda, James Howard, Allen Hu, Stephen Huddleston, Tomohiro Iida, Hiroko Imaizumi, Yasuo Ito, Yasuki Ito, Sujit Itty, Golnaz Javey, Cameron Javid, Tatsushi Kaga, Jakub Kaluzny, Se Woong Kang, Kapil Kapoor, Levent Karabas, Tsutomu Kawasaki, Patrick Kelty, Agnes Kerenyi, Arshad Khanani, Ramin Khoramnia, Rahul Khurana, Kazuhiro Kimura, Kendra Klein-Mascia, Namie Kobayashi, Laurent Kodjikian, Hideki Koizumi, Gregg Kokame, Alexey Kulikov, Henry Kwong, Robert Kwun, Timothy Lai, Chi-Chun Lai, Laurent Lalonde, Paolo Lanzetta, Michael Larsen, Adrian Lavina, Won Ki Lee, ji Eun Lee, Seong Lee, Jaime Levy, Lucas Lindsell, Mimi Liu, Nikolas London, Andrew Lotery, David Lozano Rechy, Alan Luckie, David Maberley, Takatoshi Maeno, Sajjad Mahmood, Fuad Makkouk, Dennis Marcus, Alan Margherio, Helene Masse, Hisashi Matsubara, Raj Maturi, Sonia Mehta, Geeta Menon, Jale Mentes, Mark Michels, Yoshinori Mitamura, Paul Mitchell, Quresh Mohamed, Jordi Mones, Rodrigo Montemayor Lobo, Javier Montero, Jeffrey Moore, Ryusaburo Mori, Haia Morori-Katz, Raj Mukherjee, Toshinori Murata, Maria Muzyka-Wozniak, Marco Nardi, Niro Narendran, Massimo Nicolo, Jared Nielsen, Tetsuya Nishimura, Kousuke Noda, Anna Nowinska, Hideyasu Oh, Matthew Ohr, Annabelle Okada, Piotr Oleksy, Shinji Ono, Sengul Ozdek, Banu Ozturk, Luis Pablo, Kyu Hyung Park, D. Wilki Parke, Maria Cristina Parravano, Praveen Patel, Apurva Patel, Sunil Patel, Sugat Patel, Daniel Pauleikhoff, Ian Pearce, Joel Pearlman, Iva Petkova, Dante Pieramici, Nadezhda Pozdeyeva, Jawad Qureshi, Dorota Raczynska, Juan Ramirez Estudillo, Rajiv Rathod, Hessam Razavi, Gayatri Reilly, Federico Ricci, Ryan Rich, Bożena Romanowska-Dixon, Irit Rosenblatt, Jose Maria Ruiz Moreno, Stefan Sacu, Habiba Saedon, Usman Saeed, Min Sagong, Taiji Sakamoto, Sukhpal Sandhu, Laura Sararols, Mario Saravia, Ramin Schadlu, Patricio Schlottmann, Tetsuju Sekiryu, András Seres, Figen Sermet, Sumit Shah, Rohan Shah, Ankur Shah, Thomas Sheidow, Veeral Sheth, Chieko Shiragami, Bartosz Sikorski, Rufino Silva, Lawrence Singerman, Robert Sisk, Torben L. Sørensen, Eric Souied, David-J Spinak, Giovanni Staurenghi, Robert Steinmetz, Glenn Stoller, Robert Stoltz, Eric Suan, Ivan Suner, Yzer Suzanne, Ramin Tadayoni, Kanji Takahashi, Kei Takayama, Alexandre Taleb, James Talks, Hiroko Terasaki, John Thompson, Edit Toth-Molnar, Khoi Tran, Raman Tuli, Eduardo Uchiyama, Attila Vajas, Janneke Van Lith-Verhoeven, Balazs Varsanyi, Gianni Virgili, Gábor Vogt, Michael Völker, David Warrow, Pamela Weber, John A. Wells, Sanjeewa Wickremasinghe, Mark Wieland, Geoff Williams, Thomas Williams, David Wong, King Wong, James Wong, Ian Wong, Robert Wong, Bogumil Wowra, Charles C. Wykoff, Ayana Yamashita, Kanako Yasuda, Gursel Yilmaz, Glenn Yiu, Ai Yoneda, Young Hee Yoon, Barak Yoreh, HyeongGon Yu, Seung Young Yu, Tatiana Yurieva, Alberto Zambrano, Barbara Zatorska, and Carlos Zeolite
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Visual Acuity ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,General Medicine ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Angiopoietin-2 ,Macular Degeneration ,Receptors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Antibodies, Bispecific ,Intravitreal Injections ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
Faricimab is a bispecific antibody that acts through dual inhibition of both angiopoietin-2 and vascular endothelial growth factor A. We report primary results of two phase 3 trials evaluating intravitreal faricimab with extension up to every 16 weeks for neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD).TENAYA and LUCERNE were randomised, double-masked, non-inferiority trials across 271 sites worldwide. Treatment-naive patients with nAMD aged 50 years or older were randomly assigned (1:1) to intravitreal faricimab 6·0 mg up to every 16 weeks, based on protocol-defined disease activity assessments at weeks 20 and 24, or aflibercept 2·0 mg every 8 weeks. Randomisation was performed through an interactive voice or web-based response system using a stratified permuted block randomisation method. Patients, investigators, those assessing outcomes, and the funder were masked to group assignments. The primary endpoint was mean change in best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) from baseline averaged over weeks 40, 44, and 48 (prespecified non-inferiority margin of four letters), in the intention-to-treat population. Safety analyses included patients who received at least one dose of study treatment. These trials are registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (TENAYA NCT03823287 and LUCERNE NCT03823300).Across the two trials, 1329 patients were randomly assigned between Feb 19 and Nov 19, 2019 (TENAYA n=334 faricimab and n=337 aflibercept), and between March 11 and Nov 1, 2019 (LUCERNE n=331 faricimab and n=327 aflibercept). BCVA change from baseline with faricimab was non-inferior to aflibercept in both TENAYA (adjusted mean change 5·8 letters [95% CI 4·6 to 7·1] and 5·1 letters [3·9 to 6·4]; treatment difference 0·7 letters [-1·1 to 2·5]) and LUCERNE (6·6 letters [5·3 to 7·8] and 6·6 letters [5·3 to 7·8]; treatment difference 0·0 letters [-1·7 to 1·8]). Rates of ocular adverse events were comparable between faricimab and aflibercept (TENAYA n=121 [36·3%] vs n=128 [38·1%], and LUCERNE n=133 [40·2%] vs n=118 [36·2%]).Visual benefits with faricimab given at up to 16-week intervals demonstrates its potential to meaningfully extend the time between treatments with sustained efficacy, thereby reducing treatment burden in patients with nAMD.F Hoffmann-La Roche.
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- 2022
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4. List of Contributors
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Omar Abu-Qamar, Eugenia Custo Greig, Daniela Ferrara, Darin R. Goldman, Alessandro A. Jammal, Emily S. Levine, Luísa S.M. Mendonça, Alexandre S.C. Reis, Eduardo Uchiyama, and Nadia K. Waheed
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- 2022
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5. List of Contributors
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Tomas S. Aleman, Sruthi Arepalli, Rubens Belfort, Frederick R. Blodi, Bahram Bodaghi, Weilin Chan, Peter Yuwei Chang, Marie-Lyne Belair, Eric Fortin, Erika Massicotte, Sarah Chorfi, Christopher Conrady, Dean Eliott, C. Stephen Foster, Danielle Trief, Muhammad Hassan, Swathi Kaliki, Henry J. Kaplan, Jelena Karadzic, Madison E. Kerley, Ashleigh L. Levison, Aaron Lindeke-Myers, George Magrath, Albert M. Maguire, Caroline L. Minkus, Bobeck S. Modjtahedi, Judith Mohay, Kareem Moussa, Marion Ronit Munk, Quan Dong Nguyen, Neil Onghanseng, George N. Papaliodis, Kathryn Pepple, Aleksandra Radosavljevic, Aparna Ramasubramanian, Sivakumar R. Rathinam, Mohammad Ali Sadiq, Harpal S. Sandhu, Jessica G. Shantha, Ryan A. Shields, Lucia Sobrin, Dinu Stanescu, Kim Anne Strässle, Eric Suhler, Aristomenis Thanos, Sara Touhami, Adelaide Toutee, Eduardo Uchiyama, Russell Neil Van Gelder, Camila V. Ventura, Liana O. Ventura, Albert Vitale, Steven Yeh, and Manfred Zierhut
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- 2021
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6. Syphilitic Posterior Placoid Chorioretinitis
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Bobeck S. Modjtahedi, Eduardo Uchiyama, and Ashleigh L. Levison
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Tuberculosis ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Posterior pole ,Chorioretinitis ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,eye diseases ,Toxoplasmosis ,Lesion ,Prednisone ,medicine ,Syphilis ,Differential diagnosis ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A 62-year-old human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)–positive Caucasian man presented with 3 days of painless vision loss in the left eye. The right eye demonstrated optic disc edema and the left a deep, orange-yellow placoid lesion in the posterior pole. A broad differential diagnosis was entertained, including syphilis, viral retinitis, tuberculosis, primary toxoplasmosis, and endogenous infectious chorioretinitis. Syphilis serology was positive, and the patient responded to intravenous penicillin combined with prednisone.
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- 2021
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7. Acute Retinal Necrosis (ARN)
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Bobeck S. Modjtahedi and Eduardo Uchiyama
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Pars plana ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Difluprednate ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Panuveitis ,Varicella zoster virus ,Retinitis ,Retinal detachment ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Scleral buckle ,eye diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Ophthalmology ,Medicine ,Acute retinal necrosis ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A 38-year-old black Haitian male presented with worsening vision and floaters in his right eye for the past 2 weeks. The day before symptoms started, the patient felt a foreign body sensation while cutting lumber. He was evaluated by an outside physician, who started the patient on difluprednate drops without improvement. Later examination revealed panuveitis with extensive retinitis. Polymerase chain reaction testing of the aqueous humor was positive for varicella zoster virus. The patient responded to high-dose antivirals. His course was complicated by retinal detachment, which was successfully repaired with a combined scleral buckle and pars plana vitrectomy procedure.
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- 2021
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8. Pre-papillary vitreous opacities associated with Behçet’s disease: a case series and review of the literature
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George N. Papaliodis, Samaneh Davoudi, Ann Marie Lobo, Eduardo Uchiyama, Lucia Sobrin, and Lindsay A. Grotting
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,genetic structures ,Optic Disk ,Mucocutaneous zone ,Disease ,Behcet's disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retinal Diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Vitreous opacity ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Behcet Syndrome ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,Vitreous Body ,stomatognathic diseases ,Ophthalmology ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optic nerve ,Female ,sense organs ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Uveitis - Abstract
To present pre-papillary vitreous opacity as an uncommon manifestation of inflammation in Behcet’s disease that may be specific to this uveitic entity. We retrospectively reviewed the charts of 67 patients with Behcet’s disease examined at our clinic between 2005 and 2016. Behcet’s disease was diagnosed based on established clinical criteria of inflammation involving the eyes, mucocutaneous junctions, and skin. Patients with Behcet’s disease who presented with papillitis and a pre-papillary vitreous opacity were identified. Response to anti-inflammatory treatment on examination and optical coherence tomography imaging were evaluated. PubMed searches were performed for (1) other cases with pre-papillary vitreous opacities in uveitic entities and (2) reports of optic nerve involvement specifically in Behcet’s disease. We identified three patients with Behcet’s disease who presented with unilateral papillitis and a pre-papillary vitreous opacity. The pre-papillary vitreous opacity had a funnel-shaped appearance on optical coherence tomography. All patients were initially treated with steroids, which led to resolution of the opacity clinically and on imaging. We identified one previous report of such a pre-papillary opacity in a patient with Behcet’s disease, and no reports of this finding in other uveitic entities. This study expands the number of Behcet’s disease cases presenting with a pre-papillary vitreous opacity and demonstrates novel optical coherence imaging of this finding. This finding may be specific to Behcet’s disease as it was not identified in other uveitic entities in a review of the existing literature.
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- 2017
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9. Extension study of the safety and efficacy of CLS-TA for treatment of macular oedema associated with non-infectious uveitis (MAGNOLIA)
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Thomas A. Ciulla, Eric B. Suhler, Milan Shah, Mark R Barakat, Pauline T. Merrill, Christopher R. Henry, Robert C Wang, Barry Kapik, Eduardo Uchiyama, Steven Yeh, and Rahul N. Khurana
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,Triamcinolone acetonide ,Macular oedema ,Triamcinolone Acetonide ,Macular Edema ,law.invention ,Uveitis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Infectious uveitis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Ophthalmology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Adverse effect ,Glucocorticoids ,Macular edema ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,Treatment Outcome ,Magnolia ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
PurposeTo assess the extended efficacy and safety of suprachoroidal triamcinolone acetonide injectable suspension (CLS-TA) among patients with macular oedema (ME) secondary to non-infectious uveitis (NIU).MethodsPatients with uveitic ME were treated with suprachoroidal CLS-TA at baseline and week 12 of the Efficacy and Safety of Suprachoroidal CLS-TA for Macular Edema Secondary to Noninfectious Uveitis: Phase 3 Randomized Trial (PEACHTREE) study. Time to rescue was evaluated over 24 additional weeks for MAGNOLIA. Safety data, visual acuity and retinal central subfield thickness (CST) reduction were also evaluated. Of the 53 eligible patients (46 CLS-TA and 7 control), 33 patients were enrolled (28 CLS-TA and 5 control).ResultsOver the entire 48-week period for PEACHTREE and MAGNOLIA, the median time to rescue therapy was 257 days versus 55.5 days for the CLS-TA and sham-control arms, respectively. Of 28 CLS-TA treated patients who participated in MAGNOLIA, 14 (50%) did not require rescue therapy through approximately 9 months after the second treatment. Among CLS-TA patients not requiring rescue, there was a mean gain of 12.1 letters and mean CST reduction of 174.5 µm at week 48. No serious adverse events related to study treatment were observed.ConclusionApproximately 50% of patients did not require additional treatment for up to 9 months following the last CLS-TA administration.
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- 2021
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10. Contributors
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A YASIN ALIBHAI, CAROLINE R. BAUMAL, SHILPA DESAI, IVANA N. DESPOTOVIC, JAY S. DUKER, DANIELA FERRARA, DARIN R. GOLDMAN, NORA MUAKKASSA, CARLOS A. MOREIRA NETO, EDUARDO A. NOVAIS, CARL REBHUN, LUIZ ROISMAN, EDUARDO UCHIYAMA, and NADIA K. WAHEED
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- 2018
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11. Birdshot Retinochoroidopathy
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Eduardo Uchiyama
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Birdshot retinochoroidopathy - Published
- 2018
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12. Posterior Necrotizing Scleritis Presenting as Sectoral Chorioretinitis
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Rebecca C. Stacy, Eduardo Uchiyama, Frederick A. Jakobiec, and Lucia Sobrin
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Chorioretinitis ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Fluorescein angiography ,medicine.disease ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Radiology ,Ultrasonography ,business ,Necrotizing scleritis - Abstract
Necrotizing scleritis is primarily considered an anterior segment disease, often (but not always) affecting patients with underlying autoimmune diagnoses such as rheumatoid arthritis.1 Histopatholo...
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- 2014
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13. Factores de riesgo en cáncer de cuello uterino
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Julio Cieza, Federico Cueva, Víctor Linares, and Eduardo Uchiyama
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Gynecology ,Sexual partner ,Cervical cancer ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,Advanced stage ,Cancer ,Papanicolaou stain ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Gynecological cancer ,Sexual relation ,medicine ,business - Abstract
OBJETIVO: Identificar los factores de riesgo del cáncer de cuello uterino. DISEÑO: Se realizó un estudio retrospectivo descriptivo de enero de 1995 a marzo de 1996, de pacientes que consultaron al Departamento de Ginecología-Obstetricia del Hospital Regional Docente "Las Mercedes" de Chiclayo. Se revisó las fichas de Registro de Cáncer Ginecológico, incluyéndose 110 pacientes con diagnóstico de cáncer de cuello uterino. La patología fue confirmada con estudio histológico de biopsia de cuello uterino en el 95% de los casos. RESULTADOS. -El promedio de edad fue de 47 años. El 38,2% fue conviviente. El 41% procedió de Chiclayo y distritos. 68 mujeres nunca tuvieron Papanicolaou previo. El promedio de edad de inicio de relaciones sexuales fue de 18,4 años. 21 % tuvo, más de un compañero sexual. El promedio de hijos por paciente fue de 6,4. 77,3% fueron cáncer avanzado (II, III y IV). El inicio de las relaciones sexuales a temprana edad y el número elevado de hijos son los factores de riesgo encontrados. El número de compañeros sexuales en ambos sexos debe ser evaluado. CONCLUSIONES: Esta neoplasia es un problema de salud pública: el 77,3% son estadíos avanzados, sólo el 41 % procede de Chiclayo y 61,8% nunca tuvo Papanicolaou previo.
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- 2015
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14. Accuracy of the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) As a Research Tool for Identification of Patients with Uveitis and Scleritis
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Robert M. Plenge, George N. Papaliodis, Sebastian Unizony, Lucia Sobrin, Sepideh Faez, Eduardo Uchiyama, and Humzah Nasir
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musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Databases, Factual ,Epidemiology ,education ,Uveitis ,Polymyalgia rheumatica ,Infectious uveitis ,International Classification of Diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,business.industry ,Ocular Infections ,Medical record ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Surgery ,Ophthalmology ,Polymyalgia Rheumatica ,Clinical diagnosis ,Epidemiologic Methods ,business ,Scleritis - Abstract
To report on the accuracy of the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes for identifying patients with polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) and concurrent noninfectious inflammatory ocular conditions in a large healthcare organization database.Queries for patients with PMR and uveitis or scleritis were executed in two general teaching hospitals' databases. Patients with ocular infections or other rheumatologic conditions were excluded. Patients with PMR and ocular inflammation were identified, and medical records were reviewed to confirm accuracy.The query identified 10,697 patients with the ICD-9-CM code for PMR and 4154 patients with the codes for noninfectious inflammatory ocular conditions. The number of patients with both PMR and noninfectious uveitis or scleritis by ICD-9-CM codes was 66. On detailed review of the charts of these 66 patients, 31 (47%) had a clinical diagnosis of PMR, 43 (65%) had noninfectious uveitis or scleritis, and only 20 (30%) had PMR with concurrent noninfectious uveitis or scleritis confirmed based on clinical notes.While the use of ICD-9-CM codes has been validated for medical research of common diseases, our results suggest that ICD-9-CM codes may be of limited value for epidemiological investigations of diseases which can be more difficult to diagnose. The ICD-9-CM codes for rarer diseases (PMR, uveitis and scleritis) did not reflect the true clinical problem in a large proportion of our patients. This is particularly true when coding is performed by physicians outside the area of specialty of the diagnosis.
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- 2015
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15. Leukemic retinopathy
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Johnathan D. Warminski and Eduardo Uchiyama
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Male ,Ophthalmology ,Leukemia ,Adolescent ,Retinal Neoplasms ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,Humans ,Retinal Hemorrhage ,Retinal Vessels - Published
- 2014
16. Side-effects of anti-inflammatory therapy in uveitis
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George N. Papaliodis, Eduardo Uchiyama, Lucia Sobrin, and Ann-Marie Lobo
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genetic structures ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Inflammation ,Anti-inflammatory ,Intraocular inflammation ,Immunomodulation ,Uveitis ,Infectious uveitis ,medicine ,Humans ,Glucocorticoids ,Ocular inflammation ,Blindness ,business.industry ,Immunosuppression ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,Immunology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
Uveitis is a group of inflammatory ocular conditions that cause significant visual morbidity around the world. Many of the cases of blindness secondary to uveitis can be avoided with adequate and aggressive management of the intraocular inflammation. Steroids have been utilized in the treatment of noninfectious uveitis for more than 60 years, but their chronic use is associated with severe ocular and systemic side-effects. Ophthalmologists are often not familiar with the systemic steroid-sparing agents available for the management of ocular inflammation and depend primarily on the use of corticosteroids. In this article, we review the most common agents utilized in the treatment of uveitis and their side-effect profiles.
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- 2014
17. The role of serological titres in the diagnosis of ocular toxoplasmosis
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Miin Roh, George N. Papaliodis, Ann Marie Lobo, Cagla Yasa, Eduardo Uchiyama, Lucia Sobrin, Laura Nicholson, Heeyoon Cho, Marlene L. Durand, and Lucy H. Young
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Adolescent ,030106 microbiology ,Antibodies, Protozoan ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Serology ,Uveitis ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Toxoplasmosis, Ocular ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Toxoplasmosis ,Ophthalmology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Chorioretinitis ,Immunoglobulin G ,Immunology ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,business ,Toxoplasma ,Follow-Up Studies - Published
- 2015
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18. Impact of evaporation on aqueous tear loss
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James P, McCulley, Eduardo, Uchiyama, Joel D, Aronowicz, and Igor A, Butovich
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Adult ,Male ,Keratoconjunctivitis Sicca ,Meibomian Glands ,Humidity ,Middle Aged ,2006 Papers ,Fluorophotometry ,Body Water ,Tears ,Eyelid Diseases ,Humans ,Female ,Volatilization - Abstract
To determine the impact of evaporation on preocular aqueous tear (AT) loss in normal subjects (controls) and patients with keratoconjunctivitis sicca (KCS).Eighteen patients (32 eyes) with KCS with or without associated meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) and 11 sex-matched controls had AT evaporation determined between relative humidity (RH) of 20% and 45% using an evaporometer. AT volume, flow, and turnover were determined with a fluorophotometer.Evaporative rates increased significantly when the RH was changed from 40%-45% to 20%-25% (P.001). This change was similar in all groups and on average accounted for a 99.43% increase. There were no statistically significant differences in evaporative rate between controls, the KCS alone group, and the KCS/MGD group. Dry eye patients exhibited a decreased tear turnover when compared to controls. Evaporative contribution to tear loss at 40%-45% RH was 23.47% for controls, 30.99% for "classic" KCS patients, and 25.44% for KCS/MGD patients. At 20%-25% RH, the evaporative contribution was 41.66% for controls, 57.67% for classic KCS patients, and 50.28% for KCS/MGD patients.RH significantly impacts evaporation regardless of the presence of dry eye disease and probably accounts for the increased dry eye symptoms in people (controls and dry eye patients) in conditions of low RH (eg, deserts, airplane cabins, cold dry seasons). Contribution of evaporation to tear loss tends to be higher than previously described. The percent contribution is dependent on environmental conditions such as RH. There was a trend toward increased contribution to AT loss in dry eye patients vs controls, but statistical significance was not reached.
- Published
- 2007
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