Ocular GVHD: Eye Problems After BMT

Ocular GVHD (Graft-Versus-Host Disease) is an immune-mediated condition that develops after a bone marrow or stem cell transplant. Donor immune cells attack the tear glands and eye surface, causing dry eyes, burning, redness, and light sensitivity. Early specialist evaluation and treatment protect the eye surface and preserve vision long-term.


Ocular GVHD affects your eyes after a bone marrow or stem cell transplant. Donor immune cells target your tear glands and corneal surface. The condition can appear weeks, months, or even years after transplant. Early identification changes outcomes significantly.

This condition sits at the intersection of haematology and ophthalmology. Your transplant team and your eye doctor need to work together. Regular eye review is part of post-transplant care, not an optional extra.


What Is Ocular GVHD?

Graft-Versus-Host Disease (GVHD) is an immune-mediated inflammatory reaction. It occurs when donor immune cells recognise the recipient’s tissues as foreign and attack them. Several organs can be affected, including the skin, liver, gut, and eyes.

The eye is more commonly affected in chronic GVHD, but acute GVHD can also involve the ocular surface. When the eyes are involved, the condition is called Ocular GVHD.


What Are the Symptoms of Ocular GVHD?

Symptoms range from mild to severe. They include one or more of the following:

  • Dry eyes and a persistent gritty sensation
  • Burning and irritation
  • Redness
  • Excessive watering and tearing
  • Light sensitivity
  • Blurred or fluctuating vision

In children, obvious complaints are often absent. Parents may notice excessive eye rubbing, light sensitivity, or reluctance to open the eyes in bright light.

Do not dismiss vague symptoms such as discomfort, scratchiness, or eye fatigue. These can be early signs of ocular GVHD. Your transplant surgeon may request an eye evaluation even when you have no symptoms at all.


How Is Ocular GVHD Diagnosed?

A complete eye examination is the starting point. This includes visual acuity testing, refraction, slit-lamp examination, and tear film assessment.

Your eye doctor will also perform specific tests to evaluate the ocular surface. These include the Schirmer’s test, and staining of the cornea with fluorescein and/or Rose Bengal dyes. These tests assess tear production and identify surface damage not visible to the naked eye.


How Is Ocular GVHD Treated?

Management focuses on controlling dryness, reducing inflammation, preventing infection, and protecting the cornea from scarring.

Systemic drugs given by your bone marrow transplant team for the rest of the body often do not adequately treat the eyes. Your eye doctor will likely recommend one or more of the following:

  • Lubricating eye drops to improve comfort and reduce corneal damage
  • Steroid eye drops to control inflammation and prevent scarring
  • Antibiotic eye drops to prevent or treat secondary infection
  • Autologous serum eye drops to support healing of the ocular surface
  • Cyclosporine eye drops to reduce the immune-mediated reaction

Treatment is adjusted over time based on disease activity and symptom burden. This is a condition that needs long-term follow-up, not a single course of treatment.


How is Ocular GVHD Classified?

Acute ocular GVHD develops during or soon after systemic acute GVHD and is characterized by sudden inflammation, redness, pain, tearing, photophobia, and conjunctival involvement.

Chronic ocular GVHD is a long-term immune-mediated disease that typically presents with persistent dry eye, burning, grittiness, fluctuating vision, meibomian gland dysfunction, and progressive ocular surface damage.

Acute-on-chronic ocular GVHD occurs when a patient with established chronic ocular GVHD experiences a sudden inflammatory flare, causing a rapid worsening of symptoms such as redness, pain, light sensitivity, and ocular surface inflammation on top of their baseline chronic dry eye disease.


Who Is Most at Risk?

Anyone who has undergone a bone marrow or stem cell transplant can develop ocular GVHD. Risk is higher in:

  • Patients with chronic GVHD affecting other organs
  • Patients on prolonged immunosuppression
  • Those with a history of acute GVHD

Children who have had transplants are a particularly vulnerable group. Symptoms may be subtle. Eye problems can quietly affect reading, school performance, and daily comfort without an obvious complaint from the child.


When to See a Specialist

See an eye specialist promptly if any of the following apply.

You or your child has had a bone marrow or stem cell transplant, and eye symptoms have appeared at any point after — not only in the early weeks.

Symptoms are present but mild. Mild ocular GVHD does not stay mild without treatment. Surface damage accumulates quietly.

Your transplant team has not yet arranged an ophthalmic review. Ask for one. It should be part of standard post-transplant follow-up.

Vision feels “off” even though a recent check showed normal acuity. Tear film instability affects functional vision. Standard acuity testing does not capture it.

You have been given lubricants but the symptoms persist. This is a signal for specialist evaluation, not a reason to try a different brand of drops.

What Doctors Sometimes Miss

Ocular GVHD is underdiagnosed. Several patterns come up repeatedly in practice.

Symptoms labelled as “just dry eyes.” Post-transplant dryness is not routine dry eye. The mechanism is different, the severity is higher, and the risk of corneal scarring is real. It needs specialist evaluation, not over-the-counter drops.

Children who don’t complain. A child who rubs their eyes, squints, or avoids reading is not always being difficult. These are ocular surface symptoms. Parents and transplant teams both need to watch for them.

The quiet chronic phase. Acute GVHD gets attention. Chronic ocular GVHD can smoulder for months with low-grade symptoms. Vision may remain measurably normal while the surface continues to deteriorate. Symptom absence does not mean the eye is safe.

Delayed referral from transplant teams. Eye review is sometimes requested only after symptoms become severe. Baseline ophthalmic evaluation before or shortly after transplant is better practice. Earlier review means earlier intervention.


Ocular GVHD: Symptoms, Causes, and When to Worry

SymptomWhat It MeansWhen to Worry
Dryness and grittinessTear gland damage from donor immune cellsIf persistent or worsening despite lubricants
Burning and irritationOcular surface inflammationIf affecting daily activities, reading, or sleep
RednessConjunctival involvementIf sudden, severe, or accompanied by pain
Light sensitivityCorneal surface damageIf debilitating or new after a settled period
Blurred or fluctuating visionTear film instability or corneal changesAlways warrants prompt specialist review
Eye rubbing in childrenMay be the only visible signIf post-transplant, refer early — do not wait
Watering and tearingReflex response to surface drynessIf combined with other symptoms

FAQs

Can ocular GVHD occur without dry eye symptoms?

Yes. Some patients present with redness, light sensitivity, or blurred vision rather than classic dryness. In children, the only sign may be eye rubbing or reluctance to be in bright light. A specialist examination is more reliable than symptom-based self-assessment.

Does ocular GVHD go away on its own?

Occasionally it settles with time, but many patients need long-term treatment. Stopping treatment early often leads to flare-ups. Your eye doctor will guide when and how to taper any medications.

Can both eyes be affected?

Yes. Ocular GVHD typically affects both eyes, though one side may be more symptomatic than the other.

Is teleconsultation available for ocular GVHD follow-up?

Yes. If you live outside Gurgaon or are unable to travel, teleconsultation is available to support ongoing management in partnership with your local eye doctor.


This page is part of the Dry Eye Disease hub. Read about our full approach to GVHD, dry eyes, and children’s eye care. Please also read the Pediatric Eye Care hub.

Here’s another heartening patient story: A young boy and his love for trucks, and Chronic GVHD and Success Stories.


About the Author

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine.

She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma management, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice (Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision. Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

If you are unable to come to Dr Bhartiya’s clinic: Read more about teleconsultation

Read her research on PubMed | Google Scholar | ResearchGate | ORCID

Upload your reports for a structured review.| www.drshibalbhartiya.com | +91 88826 38735

Leave a review on Google

Read a patient story:

Ocular GVHD in Children

Chronic GVHD and Success Stories

Ocular Graft Versus Host Disease in Children

Ocular GVHD (Graft-versus-Host Disease) can cause severe dry eyes, burning, fluctuating vision, light sensitivity, and damage to the eye surface after a bone marrow or stem cell transplant. Early diagnosis and long-term eye care may help protect comfort, vision, and quality of life.

Managing these cases requires specialised corneal expertise, strict protective isolation compliance, and a deeply trauma-informed approach to pediatric clinical examination. Scientific precision alone is not enough — the child must feel safe enough to let you in.


Beyond the Sterile Barrier: Pediatric Ocular Graft-Versus-Host Disease

There are moments in a pediatric ophthalmologist’s career that anchor you for life.

During my time at Fortis, I cared for a tiny boy fighting for his life after a bone marrow transplant. Severe, acute Ocular GVHD had left his corneas damaged, covered in countless microscopic raw spots — Superficial Punctate Keratitis — causing blinding pain and extreme light sensitivity. He lived in the ICU, unable to open his eyes, afraid of every sound.

His immune system was almost non-existent. Anyone entering his space had to be covered head to toe in sterile gowns and masks. He could not see my face. He was terrified. Some days, he was too weak to cry.

To help him recognise me without triggering fear, I started a routine. Every time I entered his isolation pod, I whistled softly. He learned quickly. The whistle meant safety. No needles. It meant the person coming was not going to hurt him.

I would apply a careful drop of anaesthetic to numb the intense surface pain just enough to let me examine his corneas and adjust his treatment. And I kept talking. Through every protocol, every follow-up, every barrier-gowned visit, a bond formed between us.

His parents would quietly hold him. Silently, patiently, with all the love in the world.

Can GVHD be cured?

That was the only question they asked. For the pain to go away. I would say yes, he will be fine. And pray, silently.

And then one day, instead of crying, he started talking. About trucks, and JCBs and construction. All of five. And bright. And happy. Like any other five year old.

The drops continued, but he was now walking into my OPD, showing off his toys, his jeans, his shoes which have red and blue lights. And one day, we didn’t need any medication at all.

Today, he is completely cured — a bright, healthy boy, a handful and a half. Goes to big school. And to Goa with his grandparents. Collects toy trucks, especially likes yellow ones.

When he walks into my clinic, he does not see masks or sterile gowns. He sees a friend. He spots me from across the waiting room and runs full tilt into my arms. And talks till my ears hurt. And my face hurts. From smiling so much.

His parents recently told me that when they return to his BMT hospital for follow-ups, he looked up at the first floor where my old OPD used to be and insisted: “Let’s go meet Dr Shibal.” They had to remind him gently that I have moved. When he visited me at Marengo Asia after that, he looked around the new clinic and said, with complete satisfaction: “Dr Shibal, you always own the first floor.”

He is entirely right. Just like he owns my entire heart.

PS: Two of his classmates have come to me to get their glasses checked. Apparently he tells everyone about “My doctor” who has a hundred toffees. My little advertising blitzkreig he is 🙂


FAQs

What is Ocular GVHD in children, and what are the symptoms?

Ocular GVHD occurs when donor immune cells after a bone marrow transplant attack the recipient’s lacrimal glands and corneal surface. In children, symptoms include severe eye pain, redness, a gritty sensation, extreme light sensitivity, and refusal to open the eyes due to corneal surface damage. Early specialist intervention is critical to prevent permanent scarring.

What are the most common symptoms of ocular GVHD in adults?

Symptoms may include dry eyes, burning, redness, watering, irritation, light sensitivity, fluctuating vision, eye fatigue, and a feeling of grit or sand in the eyes.

Can ocular GVHD affect vision permanently?

If untreated, ocular GVHD can lead to chronic surface damage, discomfort, and vision changes. Early treatment and regular follow-up may reduce the risk of long-term complications.

How is ocular GVHD diagnosed?

Diagnosis is based on symptoms, eye examination, tear film assessment, evaluation of the eye surface, and correlation with transplant history and systemic GVHD status.

What treatments are available for ocular GVHD?

Treatment may include preservative-free lubricants, medicines to reduce inflammation, tear conservation strategies, ocular surface support, and long-term monitoring depending on severity.

How is severe pain and photophobia managed in post-transplant pediatric patients?

Management is multi-layered and highly specialised. It includes preservative-free lubricants, autologous serum eye drops, therapeutic scleral or bandage contact lenses, and targeted topical immunomodulators. During acute flares, topical anaesthetics are used carefully during examination by the specialist — never for unsupervised home use — to allow assessment without causing further distress to the child.


This page is part of the Pediatric Eye Care hub. Read about our full approach to children’s ophthalmology. Please also read Dry Eye Disease

Here’s another heartening patient story: the young girl who is now a doctor herself!


About the Author

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine.

She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma management, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice (Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision. Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

If you are unable to come to Dr Bhartiya’s clinic: Read more about teleconsultation

Read her research on PubMed | Google Scholar | ResearchGate | ORCID

Upload your reports for a structured review.| www.drshibalbhartiya.com | +91 88826 38735

Leave a review on Google


Ocular GVHD

Ocular GVHD or GVHD of the eye is an immune mediated inflammation that may affect patients who have had bone marrow transplants.