Effect of Increasing Povidone-Iodine Exposure on Corneal Epithelium and Impact on Donor Rim Cultures.

Journal: Cornea
Published:
Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of a second povidone-iodine (PVP-I) application at the time of donor tissue recovery on overall tissue quality and to analyze the rate of positive fungal and bacterial rim cultures before and after implementing increased PVP-I exposure.

Methods: The left cornea was recovered after a single application of PVP-I, while the right cornea was recovered after double PVP-I application in research-consented donors. The epithelial cell death rate was estimated using viability assay in corneal whole mounts under 10× objective (n = 5). Clinical characteristics of epithelium, stroma, and endothelium; positive rim culture rate; and incidences of infectious postoperative adverse reactions were compared for a period of 14 months before and after implementation of increased PVP-I protocol.

Results: The average epithelial cell death rate was unaltered between single and double PVP-I exposure groups. We observed a modest 10% increase in the number of tissues with mild edema after implementation of increased PVP-I exposure. Nonetheless, the percentage of tissues with moderate or severe edema was unaltered. The average positive rim culture rate decreased from 1.17% to 0.88% (P = 0.075) after implementation of the double PVP-I soak procedure. There has been only one report of infectious postoperative adverse reactions since this procedure change. By contrast, there were 5 reports for a period of 14 months before implementation of this protocol.

Conclusions: These results indicate that new donor preparation methods with an additional 5 minutes of PVP-I exposure do not affect tissue quality, reduce positive rim cultures, and lead to lower incidence of postoperative infection.

Authors
Onkar Sawant, Stephanie How, Susan Hurlbert, Michael Titus, Indu Vadakkepattath, Xiang Shen, Ali Djalilian