Allergic eye disease is common, yet often overlooked in North America. In the U.S., up to 40% of the population is deemed to be affected and this number is growing. Symptoms and signs of ocular allergy can lead to decreased productivity and negatively impact quality of life (QoL). Various treatment options exist to achieve symptom control. For allergic conjunctivitis, ophthalmic agents include antihistamines, mast cell stabilizers, dual-activity agents, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), steroids and some off-label treatments. Immunotherapy is recommended as a therapeutic option. This review provides a summary of the forms of ocular allergies, with a focus on symptoms and signs, impact on QoL, physical examination, diagnosis and therapeutic options of allergic conjunctivitis. Through multidisciplinary collaborations, a simplified algorithm for the treatment of allergic conjunctivitis is proposed for Canadian clinical practice.
Patients with SS showed higher meibomian gland dropout scores and reduced LLT and NITBUT, which likely contribute to the severe dry eye symptoms reported by SS subjects.
Glaucoma is the most common form of irreversible blindness in the world, and second only to cataract among all causes of blindness. There is still no universally agreed-upon definition of glaucoma, and as such, it remains a condition for which there are differing views on the classification of individuals within the continuum of suspicion through diagnosis. Regardless, there appears to be consensus that glaucoma refers to a group of diseases that manifest as a characteristic progressive optic neuropathy and retinal ganglion cell loss that eventually leads to a permanent loss of visual field.
Glaucoma is a major public health issue because individuals are typically asymptomatic until end stages of the disease when the associated vision loss is significant and irreversible. Studies have shown that the prevalence of undetected glaucoma is as high as 50% even in high income areas including North America and Australia, increasing to 90% in middle and low income areas such as Asia and Africa. This is at least in part a result of inadequate screening tools and strategies to detect this asymptomatic disease: without more individuals accessing routine eye examinations, glaucoma will continue to go undetected.
Vision loss from glaucoma imposes significant societal and economic burdens that increase with disease severity: the direct costs of vision loss from glaucoma exceed $300 million annually in Canada, and approach $2 billion across North America.
Dry eye disease (DED) is a common inflammatory disorder of the ocular surface. Millions of people are affected by DED worldwide. Lifitegrast is a novel drug designed to inhibit DED-associated ocular inflammation. Four clinical trials have shown that lifitegrast is well tolerated and effective in improving symptoms and signs of DED over 12 weeks. A fifth trial showed long-term safety over 1 year. Lifitegrast has been in clinical use for more than one year in the United States and was recently approved in Canada (in December 2017). In this review, we discuss lifitegrast’s novel mechanism of action and provide an overview of its clinical trial program.
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