Dear Editor,

We read, with great interest, the article by Heiligenhaus et al. [1]. While we appreciate the work conducted by the authors, especially population-based data on relatively rare conditions, we wish to raise a few points.

First, the study used a follow-up interval of 2 years to conclude that antinuclear antibody (ANA)-positive idiopathic uveitis and JIA-associated uveitis (JIA-U) do not significantly differ concerning the clinical course of uveitis, treatment, and response to corticosteroids and disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs). Although these pathologies may potentially behave similarly early in the disease course, this conclusion is potentially misleading because the clinical course of JIA-U is often much more chronic and stubborn than idiopathic anterior uveitis [2, 3]. Therefore, analysis over a longer period of time is necessary to more clearly elucidate differences in clinical course.

Second, remission status was determined by uveitis activity, or lack thereof, at the 2-year follow-up visit. While this is an important data point, this is an imprecise way to gauge remission status. With the current methodology, a patient who had been in remission for the entire 2 years and a patient with recurrent flares but quiet at the 2-year visit would both be considered in remission. Within the 2-year follow-up period, the number of flares or the duration of quiescence since the most recent flare would be important data, as these data more completely portray remission status.

Finally, ANA-positive idiopathic anterior uveitis is not a homogeneous classification with a distinct clinical phenotype. Among patients with idiopathic non-infectious anterior uveitis, ANA positivity is not known to produce a distinct clinical phenotype. The authors mention that human leukocyte antigen (HLA) B27 status was recorded, but there is no breakdown of its presence in the uveitis patients. HLA-B27-associated anterior uveitis has a known clinical phenotype, potentially adding to the heterogeneity of the ANA-positive idiopathic anterior uveitis group. Further presentation of serologic investigations would have been helpful.

We thank this group for their research on an under-represented topic in the literature and look forward to future work from this group.