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Reappraisal of the suitability of corneas from bacteremic donors for use in corneal transplants

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Background This study examined whether corneas from bacteremic donors could be used for corneal transplant. Methods Corneas donated to the National Eye Bank of Taiwan between 1 January 2014 and… Click to show full abstract

Background This study examined whether corneas from bacteremic donors could be used for corneal transplant. Methods Corneas donated to the National Eye Bank of Taiwan between 1 January 2014 and 30 June 2017 were included in this study. All the corneas had corneoscleral rim cultures during the retrieval process and were hypothermic preserved in the Optisol-GS storage medium. A microbial work-up flow chart was used for the sterility check of all grafts. Bacteremic donors were defined as those whose last blood culture before corneal donation was positive. The microbial contamination rates, the endothelial cell densities, the tissue utility rates and early complications after transplants were compared between the corneas from bacteremic versus non-bacteremic donors. Results 697 corneas from 356 donors were analysed, 70 of which were from bacteremic donors. The microbial contamination rates of the corneas from bacteremic and non-bacteremic donors (7.1% vs 9.1%)(p=0.30) were close. None of the contaminated corneas grew the same bacterial strains as those from their blood cultures. The corneas from bacteremic donors and non-bacteremic donors have similar endothelial cell densities (2931±297 cells/mm2 vs 2903 ± 470 cells/mm2) (p=0.63). Corneas from bacteremic and non-bacteremic donors shared a similar utility rate (98.6% vs 99.4%)(p=0.41). None of the corneas caused infectious complications after transplants. Conclusion Our study showed that corneas from bacteremic and non-bacteremic donors have equally low contamination rates and are of the same quality in terms of endothelial cell density and safety.

Keywords: corneas bacteremic; bacteremic donors; bacteremic non; endothelial cell; contamination rates; non bacteremic

Journal Title: British Journal of Ophthalmology
Year Published: 2018

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