Corneoscleral rim cultures: lack of utility and implications for clinical decision-making and infection prevention in the care of patients undergoing corneal transplantation

TitleCorneoscleral rim cultures: lack of utility and implications for clinical decision-making and infection prevention in the care of patients undergoing corneal transplantation
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2001
AuthorsEverts RJ, Fowler WC, Chang DH, Reller LB
JournalCornea
Volume20
Issue6
Pagination586 - 9
Date PublishedAug
ISSN0277-3740 (Print) 0277-3740 (Linking)
Accession Number11473157
Keywords*Corneal Transplantation, Bacteria / *isolation & purification, Cornea / *microbiology, Decision Making, Endophthalmitis / microbiology / *prevention & control, Eye Banks, Eye Infections, Bacterial / microbiology / *prevention & control, Humans, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Quality Control, Retrospective Studies, Sclera / *microbiology
Abstract

PURPOSE: To assess the utility of donor corneoscleral rim cultures. METHODS: A retrospective review of the culture results of 774 corneoscleral rims that remained after trephination of corneas for transplantation into patients at our academic medical center between January 1992 and November 1997. RESULTS: Forty-one (5.3%) corneoscleral rim cultures yielded microorganisms, mostly coagulase-negative staphylococci. Two patients developed endophthalmitis (one with Staphylococcus aureus and one with Pseudomonas aeruginosa) within 3 months after transplantation; each had a negative corneoscleral rim culture and neither patient's infection was temporally related to the transplant procedure. CONCLUSIONS: Preoperative donor corneoscleral rim cultures are unreliable predictors of endophthalmitis complicating corneal transplantation and, therefore, are not useful in the clinical management of patients having corneal transplants. Moreover, the discrepancy between the results of corneoscleral rim cultures and subsequent endophthalmitis renders them invalid as a quality assurance procedure. Instead, for patients with suspected endophthalmitis after corneal transplantation, we recommend that corneal surgeons select antimicrobial therapy based on current guidelines and the results of directed sampling. Furthermore, eye banks should prospectively track recipients who develop clinical endophthalmitis, immediately notify the corneal surgeon who transplanted the matched cornea of that used for the index case, and, in selected situations, attempt to identify a possible source of contamination.

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