Abstract

PurposeTo analyze the effect of tumor necrosis factor inhibitor therapy on ocular relapses in patients with Susac syndrome.MethodsMulticenter retrospective case series of patients with ocular Susac syndrome treated with a TNF inhibitor (either infliximab or adalimumab). Diagnosis was based on neurologic, ophthalmic, otologic, biologic and imaging typical findings.ResultsFive patients were included. All were initially treated with a combination of corticosteroids and classical immunosuppressive drugs. In 4 of the 5 patients a TNF‐inhibitor (3 infliximab and 2 adalimumab) was started due to treatment failure. In these patients cortisone could not be decreased below a daily dose of 10 mg without the occurrence of relapses (with an average of 4.25 relapses over a mean follow‐up of 330 days) despite the use of a mean of 2.75 different immunosuppressive drugs. After introduction of an anti‐TNF agent the daily cortisone dose could successfully be tapered below 10 mg in all patients with a complete stop in 3 patients, with a mean number of 1.25 relapses during a mean follow‐up of 1,199 days. In the fifth patient, disease activity was well controlled with only steroid sparing immunosuppressive agents and only 1 relapse during approximately 5 years of follow up until these had to be stopped for a desired pregnancy. No relapse was documented during 60 weeks of follow‐up while on infliximab treatment afterwards.ConclusionsAnti‐TNF antibodies can be a valuable option for the treatment of ocular Susac syndrome and may especially be considered in those patients unresponsive to conventional immunosuppressive treatment.

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