Incidence and Prevalence of Syphilitic Uveitis and Associated Ocular Complications in the TriNetX Database.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalAmerican journal of ophthalmology
Year 2025
PURPOSE: To determine the yearly and cumulative incidences and prevalences of syphilitic uveitis, concurrent sexually transmitted infections, and ocular complications using the United States TriNetX database. DESIGN: Trend study PARTICIPANTS: Subjects with syphilitic uveitis in the TriNetX database METHODS: Subjects with syphilitic uveitis from 2013-2024 were identified with International Classification for Disease (ICD) codes for uveitis with the constraint of a positive treponemal and non-treponemal test for syphilis within 1 month after the diagnosis of uveitis. Incidence and prevalence data were calculated from 2013-2024. Additional data collected included demographics, concurrent infection with other sexually transmitted infections (STI- HIV, gonorrhea, chlamydia), and ocular complications (macular edema and low vision). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcomes were the incidence and prevalence of syphilitic uveitis (annual and cumulative). Secondary outcomes were the incidence and prevalence of concurrent sexually transmitted infections and ocular complications (annual and cumulative). RESULTS: Out of the 81,759,791 total population in TriNetx, 161,317 cases of syphilis and 237 cases of syphilitic uveitis were identified. Of the 237 patients with syphilitic uveitis, 53.58% (N= 127, 95% CI 47.2-59.9%) were White and 75.10% (N=178, 95% CI 69.6-80.6%) were male, with a mean age of 52 years (Range: 20-90, SD=15). The most common STI co-infection was HIV (32.49%, 95% CI 26.53-38.45%, N=77). The most prevalent ocular complication was low vision and blindness (27.85%, 95% CI 22.16-33.54%, N=66); of which, the highest rates of low vision and blindness were in the cohorts with pan or posterior uveitis (78.79%, N=52). The cumulative incidence and prevalence rates of syphilitic uveitis over the 2013-2024 period were 0.36 and 0.27 cases per 100,000, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The rising incidence and prevalence of syphilitic uveitis from 2013-2024 mirrors the overall syphilis epidemic in the United States. This study highlights the need for serologic testing with treponemal and non-treponemal tests for syphilis in patients with uveitis and timely intervention to prevent irreversible visual complications.
Epistemonikos ID: 95cfb9015f2bd4e947dfed49adbb518aa1da5b23
First added on: Jun 08, 2025