Late-onset donor-to-host transmission of Candida glabrata following corneal transplantation

TitleLate-onset donor-to-host transmission of Candida glabrata following corneal transplantation
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsAl-Assiri A, Al-Jastaneiah S, Al-Khalaf A, Al-Fraikh H, Wagoner MD
JournalCornea
Volume25
Issue1
Pagination123 - 5
Date PublishedJan
ISSN0277-3740 (Print) 0277-3740 (Linking)
Accession Number16331055
Keywords*Disease Transmission, Infectious, Aged, Amphotericin B / therapeutic use, Anterior Chamber / microbiology, Candida glabrata / *isolation & purification, Candidiasis / microbiology / therapy / *transmission, Cornea / microbiology, Corneal Ulcer / drug therapy / *microbiology, Drug Therapy, Combination, Endophthalmitis / drug therapy / microbiology, Eye Infections, Fungal / drug therapy / microbiology / *transmission, Fluconazole / therapeutic use, Humans, Keratoplasty, Penetrating / *adverse effects, Male, Tissue Donors, Tissue Plasminogen Activator / therapeutic use
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate the potential value of obtaining routine fungal cultures of donor rims at the time of corneal transplantation and instituting prophylactic therapy in culture-positive cases, even in the absence of clinical evidence of established microbial keratitis or endophthalmitis. METHODS: Interventional case report and literature review. RESULTS: A 69-year-old Saudi man underwent penetrating keratoplasty with donor tissue that was culture-positive for Candida glabrata. The postoperative course was complicated by slight override of the graft associated with an associated epithelial defect, but there was no evidence of microbial keratitis or significant anterior chamber inflammation. Following repair of the graft override on postoperative day 42, the epithelial defect healed. The subsequent clinical course was unremarkable until postoperative day 146, when a deep stromal infiltrate was present at the graft-host junction, associated with a dense endothelial plaque. Cultures of the anterior chamber were positive for Candida glabrata. Treatment with topical and intracameral amphotericin B and systemic fluconazole, along with topical corticosteroids and intracameral t-PA, was successful in eradicating the corneal infiltrate and resolving intraocular inflammation. Four months after treatment was initiated, there was no evidence of recurrent fungal keratitis or endophthalmitis. CONCLUSION: This case provides support for the practice of obtaining routine fungal cultures of donor rims at the time of corneal transplantation and for the implementation of prophylactic antifungal therapy in culture-positive cases.

URLinternal-pdf://Al-Assiri -Late_Onset_Donor_to_Host_Transmission_of_Candida.23-1453086208/Al-Assiri -Late_Onset_Donor_to_Host_Transmission_of_Candida.23.pdf
DOI
Notify Library Reference ID43

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