Litcius/Paper detail

The Role of Topical Povidone-Iodine in the Management of Infectious Keratitis: A Pilot Study

Emilio Pedrotti, Erika Bonacci, Raphael Kilian, Camilla Pagnacco, Adriano Fasolo, Marco Anastasi, Gessica Manzini, Francesca Bosello, Giorgio Marchini

2022Journal of Clinical Medicine13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The aim of this prospective explorative study was to evaluate the safety and the effectiveness of topical polyvinylpyrrolidone-iodine (PVP-I) administered during the time-to-results period for pathogen identification and susceptibility testing in patients with infectious keratitis (IK). A corneal swab (CS) for antimicrobial evaluation was performed at enrollment (T0) and topical 0.66%-PVP-I was administered until the laboratory results were available (T1). Ulcer and infiltrate areas and infiltrate depths were compared between T0 and T1 (i.e., time-to-result period). Patients were then shifted to a specific antimicrobial therapy and followed up until resolution of their infiltrates (Tlast-TL). Twenty-five eyes were enrolled, and none showed clinical worsening leading to protocol withdrawal. At T1, ulcer and infiltrate areas showed significant improvement in Gram-positive IK (n = 13–52%; p = 0.027 and p = 0.019, respectively), remained stable in fungal IK (n = 5–20%; both p = 0.98) and increased in those with Gram-negative bacteria (n = 4–16%; p = 0.58 and p = 0.27). Eyes with negative cultures (n = 3–12%) showed complete resolution at T1 and did not initiate any additional antimicrobial therapy. The administration of 0.66% PVP-I during the time-to-result period seems to be a safe strategy in patients with IK while often sparing broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents. In addition, it showed to be effective in eyes with a Gram-positive bacterial infection.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAntimicrobialBroad spectrumKeratitisDermatologyInternal medicineMicrobiologyCombinatorial chemistryChemistryBiologyOcular Infections and TreatmentsIntraocular Surgery and LensesCorneal surgery and disorders