Endophthalmitis in patients with Boston keratoprosthesis type I at a Canadian eye care center
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Authors: Cristina Bostan, Taylor Nayman, Andrei Alexandru-Szigiato,
Mona H. Dagher
Author Disclosure Block: C. Bostan: None. T.
Nayman: None. A. Alexandru-Szigiato: None. M.
H. Dagher: None.
Abstract Body:
Purpose: To determine the epidemiology, visual outcomes,
and microbiological profile of Boston keratoprosthesis type I (KPro)-associated
endophthalmitis.
Study Design: Retrospective cohort study
Methods: Retrospective medical chart review of 140 consecutive KPro
eyes with a follow-up of 61±32 months. Clinically-diagnosed endophthalmitis
cases were identified. Outcome parameters included: endophthalmitis incidence
rate, surgery-to-infection time, recurrence incidence rate, vision loss
compared to baseline, loss of eye (evisceration required to control infection),
risk factors and culture results (positivity, isolated organism, antibiotic susceptibility).
Results: Endophthalmitis occurred in 12 eyes (9%) at 20±17 months
postoperatively (incidence 0.0015 cases/eye-year). Four cases of recurrence
were observed in 2 eyes (incidence 0.0086 cases/eye-year). Loss of vision >2
Snellen lines, progression to “no light perception” and eye loss occurred in
75, 33, and 17%, respectively. All patients were on prophylactic topical
fluoroquinolones and steroids before endophthalmitis episode; 75% used
extended-wear contact lenses. Ocular surface disease and prior glaucoma tube
shunt or trabeculectomy did not affect endophthalmitis risk. Positive cultures
(58%) isolated gram-positive bacteria sensitive to fluoroquinolones in all but
1 eye.
Conclusions: KPro-associated endophthalmitis occurred with an
incidence of 0.0015 cases/eye-year in our cohort, which is lower than the
incidence reported in other North-American centers. Unlike these, where
gram-negative and fungal infections are increasing, we report only
gram-positive cases with use of fluoroquinolone-alone prophylactic topical
therapy.