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. 2025 Jan:269:11-19.
doi: 10.1016/j.ajo.2024.08.008. Epub 2024 Aug 10.

Severe Intraocular Inflammation After Intravitreal Injection of Faricimab: A Single-Site Case Series of Six Patients

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Free article

Severe Intraocular Inflammation After Intravitreal Injection of Faricimab: A Single-Site Case Series of Six Patients

Inès Ben Ghezala et al. Am J Ophthalmol. 2025 Jan.
Free article

Abstract

Purpose: To describe the patient characteristics and clinical course of severe intraocular inflammation (IOI) following intravitreal injection (IVT) of faricimab.

Design: Retrospective case series.

Methods: Case series at a single French academic center (Dijon University Hospital) where 263 patients were treated with faricimab IVT between January 9, 2024 and May 7, 2024.

Results: Over the 4-month period, a total of 1659 eyes (1338 patients) received anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) IVTs for a total of 3510 IVTs, of which 343 eyes (263 patients) received faricimab IVTs for a total of 971 IVTs. Overall, 6 pretreated eyes with neovascular age-related macular degeneration that were switched to faricimab developed severe unilateral IOI following faricimab IVT (1/162 injections [0.62%]), including 5 eyes presenting with a severe anterior and intermediate uveitis mimicking infectious endophthalmitis. All eyes were normotensive and presented with mild to moderate pain and predominantly moderate vitritis, associated with granulomatous keratic precipitates in 2 eyes and nonocclusive vasculitis in one eye. The clinical presentation, sterile vitreous sample culture, and rapid improvement with treatment made the diagnosis of infectious endophthalmitis unlikely. Four patients out of 6 did not recover their pre-IOI visual acuity, with an average visual loss of +0.2 logMAR. Two patients had positive antinuclear antibodies, including one with a history of cutaneous lupus.

Conclusions: In this case series, we reported 6 cases of severe IOI after intravitreal faricimab over 4 months in a single French center with an estimated incidence rate of 0.6% per injection. Future real-world data will contribute to a better evaluation of the epidemiology of this rare inflammatory adverse event related to intravitreal faricimab.

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