Insights from 1096 clinical cases: pioneering a universal grading system for vernal keratoconjunctivitis management.
Chandrasekar Ambika, Agarwal Shweta, Chauhan Gaurav, Srinivasan Bhaskar, Chavda Varsha Bhambani, Iyer Geetha
AI Summary
This study analyzed 1096 VKC patients, finding it a chronic disease with frequent visual complications. A new VKC grading system, based on corneal status and symptom periodicity, is proposed to improve management planning.
Abstract
Aim
To analyse the clinical and demographic profiles of patients with vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC) and propose a grading for VKC based on corneal status and symptom periodicity rather than disease activity.
Methods
Retrospective observational study from January 2015 to January 2020 in India. VKC grading was based on past/present clinical signs and frequency of symptoms rather than disease activity. The electronic medical records were screened and details of VKC patients diagnosed by cornea specialists were recorded and analysed.
Results
1096 VKC patients with a mean age of onset of 7.05±5.3 with 8.39% having adult onset were analysed. Symptoms included; itching (50.55%) and decreased vision (15.44%). Mixed VKC (52.04%) was the most common presentation with 49.1% having active disease. Complications included; keratoconus (18.43%), steroid-induced cataract (11.41%), glaucoma (10.95%) and limbal stem cell deficiency (5.29%). Dual-acting antiallergics (69.39%) were most commonly used, followed by topical immunomodulators.The patients were graded as, grade I: mild-presence of mild and seasonal symptoms and/or signs. Grade II: moderate-presence of persistent symptoms/and/or signs without corneal involvement. Grade III: severe-chronic persistent symptoms/and/or intermittent signs with corneal involvement or asymptomatic to mild symptoms with corneal pathognomonic signs. Grade IV: very severe-chronic persistent symptoms and/or corneal pathognomonic signs or active involvement/complication or asymptomatic with complications.
Conclusion
VKC is a chronic disease that often causes visual complications. The new grading system based on the cornea status and symptom periodicity rather than disease activity might help plan the management better.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts4
Among 1096 vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC) patients in India, the mean age of onset was 7.05±5.3 years, with 8.39% experiencing adult onset.
In a cohort of 1096 vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC) patients in India, common complications included keratoconus (18.43%), steroid-induced cataract (11.41%), and glaucoma (10.95%).
A new grading system for vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC) is proposed based on corneal status and symptom periodicity, rather than disease activity, to help plan management.
Among 1096 vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC) patients in India, mixed VKC was the most common presentation (52.04%), and 49.1% had active disease.
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