PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Long-term antiviral use is key to ocular shingles treatment

2024-10-19
(Press-News.org) Taking an antiviral medication for a year may prevent vision damage associated with shingles that affects the eye, according to new research led by faculty from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the NYU Grossman School of Medicine at NYU Langone Health.

“Up until now, there has been no proven long-term treatment for new, worsening, or repeated episodes of this disease, so the results of this study provide convincing evidence for using long-term, low-dose antiviral treatment,” said Bennie Jeng, MD, chair of Ophthalmology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the director of the Scheie Eye Institute at Penn Medicine, who co-chaired the study. 

Ocular shingles begins in the nerve connecting the brain to the eye and is present in almost 100,000 of the million people who develop shingles each year in the United States. This is called herpes zoster ophthalmicus (HZO) and can result in keratitis (inflammation of the cornea), iritis (inflammation of the iris), and inflammation in other parts of the eye. Roughly 30,000 of HZO cases result in patients’ vision declining to 20/60 or worse, meaning that if a typically-sighted person could see an object clearly at 60 feet, these patients would have to move up to at least 20 feet to see it. Beyond that, approximately 10,000 patients who develop HZO experience legal blindness, meaning their vision is reduced to 20/200 or worse.  

For patients who had recurrences or new findings of HZO, there was never a clear course of treatment to reliably prevent complications such as vision loss. 

Elisabeth J. Cohen, MD, a professor of ophthalmology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, designed the study, after she was, herself, affected by shingles-related vision loss years ago. The study examined the long-term use of the existing antiviral treatment valacyclovir, which is already used to initially treat any case of shingles, albeit only for seven to 10 days. The researchers showed that using valacyclovir for a year can decrease the risk of new or worsening eye disease by 26 percent at 18 months after initiating treatment. Patients treated with valacyclovir also were 30 percent less likely than those not receiving the treatment to have multiple HZO flare-ups at a year or a year-and-a-half later. 

“We hope that our work creates a relatively simple path toward preventing vision changes that can be life-altering,” said Jeng. “With this drug already being part of the regular clinical treatment for shingles, we don’t envision significant barriers to making this a standard of treatment.” 

The research was presented at both the Cornea and Eye Banking Forum (Oct. 18) and the American Academy of Ophthalmology’s annual meeting (Oct. 19). It resulted from the Zoster Eye Disease Study (ZEDS), an eight-year-long study conducted at 95 medical centers across the United States, Canada, and New Zealand. Cohen led the study with Jeng serving as co-chair. 

ZEDS ran from November 2017 until January 2023, enrolling more than 500 participants who had shingles affecting their eyes. Approximately half received daily doses of valacyclovir for a year, with the others receiving a placebo. The ZEDS study also found that this same treatment reduced a chronic nerve pain syndrome that can accompany shingles. 

“While our evidence in support of a new treatment regimen is vital, prevention is even more effective than any treatment,” Cohen said. “The incidences of this are going up in persons in their 50s, and just 12 percent of that population has received the highly effective zoster vaccine. It has been recommended since 2018 for all adults age 50 and older, and, since 2022, for immunocompromised adults age 19 and older.” 

Moving forward, Jeng said the ZEDS team is looking into whether the extended antiviral treatment is especially effective in reducing glaucoma, scleritis (inflammation affecting the outer eye), and other complications. Additionally, they hope to see what impact vaccination against shingles had on the patients in the study, and whether the shingles vaccine affected COVID-19 diagnosis and severity among participants. 

Other principal study investigators from NYU Langone were Andrea B. Troxel, ScD, director of the Division of Biostatistics within the Department of Population Health, and clinical trialist Judith S. Hochman, MD, the senior associate dean for clinical sciences. ZEDS was funded by NEI grant U10 EY026869 and made possible by the ZEDS network of principal investigators and study participants who volunteered.

Editor’s note: Jeng received financial compensation in the past from a company that makes shingles vaccines

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

American Society of Anesthesiologists honors Mary Dale Peterson, M.D., MSHCA, FACHE, FASA, with its Distinguished Service Award

2024-10-19
PHILADELPHIA — The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) today presented Mary Dale Peterson, M.D., MSHCA, FACHE, FASA, with its 2023 Distinguished Service Award in recognition of her enduring contributions to advancing patient-centered, physician-led health care. Her dedicated service to the specialty and ASA includes her leadership as ASA president during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. The award is the highest honor ASA bestows and is presented annually to a member who has transformed the specialty of anesthesiology. Nationally recognized for her role in guiding health plans and hospitals, Dr. Peterson currently serves ...

Innovation south facility opens in UT Research Park at Cherokee farm

Innovation south facility opens in UT Research Park at Cherokee farm
2024-10-18
The University of Tennessee, Knoxville’s Fibers and Composites Manufacturing Facility has a new home and IACMI – The Composites Institute has new headquarters with the dedication of Innovation South. Innovation South is an 85,000-square-foot multiuse facility in UT’s Research Park at Cherokee Farm, located just off Alcoa Highway across the Tennessee River from the flagship university’s main campus. Developed and owned by Partners Development, the building includes a 40,000-square-foot ...

Photonic computing harnesses electromagnetic waves

Photonic computing harnesses electromagnetic waves
2024-10-18
In the fields of physics, mathematics, and engineering, partial differential equations (PDEs) are essential for modeling various phenomena, from heat diffusion to particle motion and wave propagation. While some PDEs can be solved analytically, many require numerical methods, which can be time-consuming and computationally intensive. To address these challenges, scientists have been exploring alternative computing paradigms, including photonic computing. Photonic computing leverages light–matter interactions to perform ...

Loss of ‘nitrogen fixers’ threatens biodiversity, ecosystems

Loss of ‘nitrogen fixers’ threatens biodiversity, ecosystems
2024-10-18
STARKVILLE, Miss.—Mississippi State University is part of a European-American collaboration studying how human activities, like fertilizer use and polluting, are impacting nitrogen-fixing plants which are crucial for maintaining healthy ecosystems by adding nitrogen to the soil. MSU Assistant Professor Ryan A. Folk of the Department of Biological Sciences co-authored a study published today [Oct. 18] in Science Advances, showing that increased nitrogen deposition from human activity is reducing the diversity and evolutionary distinctiveness of nitrogen-fixing plants. Lead author Pablo Moreno García, ...

UH Energy Transition Institute launches radio show and online webinars focused on addressing grand challenges in energy

2024-10-18
HOUSTON, Oct. 18, 2024 –The University of Houston Energy Transition Institute is launching two educational series focused on exploring the unfolding energy transition and addressing the grand challenges in energy. Starting October 21, "Driving the Energy Transition," will air on Houston Public Media’s KUHF News 88.7 with new episodes launching every two weeks on Mondays. The following day, October 22, the Energy Transition Webinar series will begin, running biweekly on ...

UVA professor tackles graph mining challenges with new algorithm

UVA professor tackles graph mining challenges with new algorithm
2024-10-18
University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied Science professor Nikolaos Sidiropoulos has introduced a breakthrough in graph mining with the development of a new computational algorithm.  Graph mining, a method of analyzing networks like social media connections or biological systems, helps researchers discover meaningful patterns in how different elements interact. The new algorithm addresses the long-standing challenge of finding tightly connected clusters, known as triangle-dense subgraphs, within large networks — a problem that is critical in fields such as fraud detection, computational biology and data ...

Announcing the new editor-in-chief of ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies

Announcing the new editor-in-chief of ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies
2024-10-18
New Rochelle, NY, October 17, 2025—Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., is pleased that Wai Hong (Kevin) Lo, PhD, has been appointed the new Editor-in-Chief of the journal ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies. Dr. Lo is replacing Bruce Melancon, PhD as Editor-in-Chief. ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies provides access to novel techniques and robust tools that enable critical advances in early-stage screening. This research published in the Journal leads to important therapeutics and platforms for drug discovery and development. This peer-reviewed journal features original papers application-oriented technology reviews, topical issues on ...

Finding could help turn trees into affordable, greener industrial chemicals

Finding could help turn trees into affordable, greener industrial chemicals
2024-10-18
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 2 P.M. EDT ON FRIDAY, OCT. 18 Trees are the most abundant natural resource living on Earth’s land masses, and North Carolina State University scientists and engineers are making headway in finding ways to use them as sustainable, environmentally benign alternatives to producing industrial chemicals from petroleum. Lignin, a polymer that makes trees rigid and resistant to degradation, has proven problematic. Now those NC State researchers know why: They’ve identified the ...

UTA to host discussion on Texas energy needs

UTA to host discussion on Texas energy needs
2024-10-18
The University of Texas at Arlington will host GridNEXT DFW 2024: Meeting the Demand, an event dedicated to envisioning the future of energy infrastructure, on Oct. 25 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The one-day seminar will bring together industry partners, leaders, government officials and private stakeholders across the Texas energy space to discuss growing power needs and how to better support the Texas power grid. It will be held at UTA’s Rio Grande Ballroom, 300 W. First St. in Arlington. Woody Rickerson, ERCOT senior vice ...

Preventive medicine professors part of collaborative grant for AI system to enhance Alzheimer's caregiving

Preventive medicine professors part of collaborative grant for AI system to enhance Alzheimers caregiving
2024-10-18
Jennifer Martindale-Adams, EdD, and Linda Nichols, PhD, professors in the Department of Preventive Medicine in the College of Medicine at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, are members of a team led by Xiaopeng Zhao, PhD, professor in the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, that was recently awarded $401,090 grant from the National Institute on Aging for the development of the RISE project, “Robot-based Information and Support to Enhance Alzheimer’s Caregiver ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Long-term low-dose antiviral treatment benefits patients with eye disease and pain from shingles

Long-term antiviral use is key to ocular shingles treatment

American Society of Anesthesiologists honors Mary Dale Peterson, M.D., MSHCA, FACHE, FASA, with its Distinguished Service Award

Innovation south facility opens in UT Research Park at Cherokee farm

Photonic computing harnesses electromagnetic waves

Loss of ‘nitrogen fixers’ threatens biodiversity, ecosystems

UH Energy Transition Institute launches radio show and online webinars focused on addressing grand challenges in energy

UVA professor tackles graph mining challenges with new algorithm

Announcing the new editor-in-chief of ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies

Finding could help turn trees into affordable, greener industrial chemicals

UTA to host discussion on Texas energy needs

Preventive medicine professors part of collaborative grant for AI system to enhance Alzheimer's caregiving

Tropical mammals react to changes in lunar light

Pennington Biomedical’s EAT2 study to explore unknown effects of weight fluctuations

Butterfly brains reveal the tweaks required for cognitive innovation

Time to sustained recovery among outpatients with COVID-19 receiving montelukast vs placebo

Drones prove effective way to monitor maize re-growth, researchers report

Materials of the future can be extracted from wastewater

Long-lasting immunotherapy response in stage IV lung cancer with brain metastasis

American lobster population, habitat preferences shifting, study finds

ASA invites media to virtual acoustics meeting Nov. 18-22

Nonnative plants are a major force behind global insect invasions, new study finds

Listening to music may speed up recovery from surgery

Emotional and financial concerns of breast cancer patients are often unmet

ACS program cuts surgical deaths and improves care for older adults, studies show

Cancer diagnoses linked to lasting financial challenges, studies find

Groundbreaking surgical technique makes combined face and whole-eye transplantation a reality

Bariatric surgery is more cost effective than newer weight loss drugs alone

How liver tissue from the international space station may transform tissue engineering

Preoperative nutrition program cuts surgery costs and complications

[Press-News.org] Long-term antiviral use is key to ocular shingles treatment