Topical bimatoprost 0.03% and iatrogenic eyelid and orbital lipodystrophy

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Abstract

The prostaglandin F2a (PGF2a) analogue bimatoprost 0.03% (Allergan, Inc, Irvine, California) has been employed for the treatment of hypotrichosis since it gained Food and Drug Administration approval as Latisse in 2008. In this report, the authors retrospectively review the cases of 7 patients who presented to their outpatient ophthalmology clinic with glaucoma. These patients had periorbital hollowing due to fat atrophy as a side effect of topical ophthalmic bimatoprost therapy. The series of patients described in this report emphasizes the small but significant risk of periocular fat changes associated with bimatoprost 0.03%, which is the exact formulation marketed as Lumigan for glaucoma treatment. Patients using Latisse for its cosmetic enhancement of eyelash length should be warned of this potentially disfiguring side effect, since the cosmetic and ophthalmic preparations are identical. Such changes can be irreversible, and the implications of the decision to prescribe this drug either in the form of an eyelash application or for topical ophthalmic use should be clearly understood by both clinicians and patients alike.Level of Evidence: 4 © 2012 The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, Inc.

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Sira, M., Verity, D. H., & Malhotra, R. (2012). Topical bimatoprost 0.03% and iatrogenic eyelid and orbital lipodystrophy. Aesthetic Surgery Journal, 32(7), 822–824. https://doi.org/10.1177/1090820X12455659

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