Increased risk of pigmentary degeneration of the iris and pigmentary glaucoma with fluoroquinolone antibiotics.
Yu Sabrina, Sodhi Mohit, Rezaeianzadeh Ramin, Eadie Brennan, Etminan Mahyar
AI Summary
This study found topical moxifloxacin significantly increases the risk of pigmentary degeneration of the iris and pigmentary glaucoma, suggesting clinicians should be aware of this potential, albeit low, adverse effect.
Abstract
Purpose
Fluoroquinolones are popular antibiotics used for a myriad of conditions including ocular procedures. Despite numerous case reports of acute pigmentary degeneration of the iris with fluoroquinolone use, a pharmacoepidemiological study has not been performed to examine and quantify this risk.
Design
Retrospective cohort study with a case-control analysis.
Participants
A cohort of 1,231,881 new users of oral or topical moxifloxacin, levofloxacin, and azithromycin were followed to first diagnosis of pigmentary degeneration of the iris or pigmentary glaucoma. Four controls were selected for each case using density sampling, matching on age and calendar time.
Methods
Users of oral or topical moxifloxacin were compared to levofloxacin and azithromycin, a negative control drug from a separate class.
Main outcomes and measures: First incidence of pigmentary degeneration of the iris or pigmentary glaucoma.
Results
The cohort was comprised of 1,231,881 new users of topical or oral levofloxacin, moxifloxacin, or azithromycin. 542 cases of pigmentary degeneration of the iris and 460 cases of pigmentary glaucoma were identified. The incidence of iris pigmentary degeneration or pigmentary glaucoma for topical moxifloxacin was 10.2/1000 person years compared to 2.6/1000 person years for topical azithromycin. Current topical moxifloxacin users had the highest adjusted IRR for pigmentary degeneration of the iris (IRR = 6.81, [95%CI:2.00-23.18]) and pigmentary glaucoma (IRR = 4.07 [95%CI:1.42-11.62]) respectively.
Conclusions
The study findings suggest that patients using topical moxifloxacin may have increased risk of developing pigmentary degeneration of the iris and pigmentary glaucoma although the absolute increase was low. Future studies are needed to confirm this association.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts3
The incidence of iris pigmentary degeneration or pigmentary glaucoma for topical moxifloxacin was 10.2/1000 person years compared to 2.6/1000 person years for topical azithromycin.
Current topical moxifloxacin users had the highest adjusted IRR for pigmentary degeneration of the iris (IRR = 6.81, [95%CI:2.00-23.18]) and pigmentary glaucoma (IRR = 4.07 [95%CI:1.42-11.62]) respectively.
Patients using topical moxifloxacin may have an increased risk of developing pigmentary degeneration of the iris and pigmentary glaucoma, although the absolute increase was low.
Related Articles5
Use of topiramate and risk of glaucoma: a case-control study.
Case-Control StudyUveitis in Adults: A Review.
ReviewDrug-associated glaucoma: A real-world study based on the Food and Drug Administration adverse event reporting system database.
Observational StudyIncidence and prevalence of mucous membrane pemphigoid with ocular involvement: a retrospective analysis using the TriNetX database.
Observational StudyInsights from 1096 clinical cases: pioneering a universal grading system for vernal keratoconjunctivitis management.
Observational StudyIs this article assigned to the wrong chapter(s)? Let us know.