New Grading System for the Evaluation of Chronic Ocular Manifestations in Patients with Stevens-Johnson Syndrome

2007 
Purpose To evaluate and grade the extent and severity of chronic ocular manifestations in Stevens–Johnson syndrome (SJS). Design Prospective multicenter case series. Participants We enrolled 73 patients (138 eyes) with SJS seen between April 2003 and March 2005 at 3 tertiary referral centers. Methods Patients with a confirmed history of SJS and chronic ocular complications that persisted for at least 1 year from the onset of SJS were included. Their detailed medical history and ophthalmic examination results were recorded on an itemized data collection form. Complications were categorized as corneal, conjunctival, and eyelid complications, and 13 components were evaluated and graded on a scale from 0 to 3 according to their severity. Main Outcome Measures These were broadly classified as corneal (superficial punctate keratopathy, epithelial defect, loss of the palisades of Vogt, conjunctivalization, neovascularization, opacification, keratinization), conjunctival (hyperemia, symblepharon formation), and eyelid (trichiasis, mucocutaneous junction involvement, meibomian gland involvement, punctal damage) complications. Results The most severely affected complication components were loss of the palisades of Vogt (114 eyes; 82.6%) and meibomian gland involvement (102 eyes; 73.9%). Visual acuity in 74 of the 138 eyes (53.6%) was worse than 20/200. The severity of corneal, conjunctival, and eyelid complications was significantly correlated with visual loss. All 13 complications were correlated significantly with logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) visual acuity; the correlation coefficient ( R ) ranged from 0.359 to 0.810 ( P R was 0.169 ( P = 0.0473). Eyes with a higher total score for the 3 complication categories had poorer vision ( R = 0.806; P P P P = 0.0142, P = 0.0375, respectively). Conclusions The authors describe a new method for grading the extent and severity of ocular involvement in patients with SJS and demonstrate that the severity of ocular involvement is correlated significantly with the final visual outcome. This new grading system provides a more objective method for evaluating SJS patients and may be adapted for use in other cicatricial ocular surface diseases.
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