Point of Care OCT Imaging May Improve the Diagnosis of Corneal Infections

 Point of Care OCT Imaging May Improve the Diagnosis of Corneal Infections

A recent study has successfully demonstrated the use of Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), a non-invasive imaging technique, to examine patients with bacterial keratitis at point of care. Bacterial keratitis is the most common corneal infection in the western world, often caused by contaminated contact lenses, and results in frequent visits to emergency departments in eye clinics worldwide. The infection, which causes upwards of two million cases of blindness in one eye every year, can be caused by gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, each of which have different implications for treatment. 

Corneal infections are typically identified through microbial cultures from corneal scrapings, which means sending samples to a laboratory and takes around forty eight hours to get the results back. This can lead to delays in providing the correct diagnosis and treatment, which are essential for getting the best possible outcome for patients.

The study, led by University of Southampton and published in Nature Scientific Reports, examined 45 patients with bacterial keratitis using OCT. In addition, the researchers also examined features of cytokines, proteins emitted from cells, in the patients’ tears to determine whether this is also an effective technique for assessing the inflammatory response. 

The findings revealed that both techniques could rapidly distinguish between gram-negative and gram-positive infections. As gram-negative infections present a higher risk to vision, this could help clinicians prescribe the right antibiotics straight away and reduce the impact of anti-microbial resistance if the wrong treatment is applied.

“The availability of OCT machines nowadays means they could be widely used in optometry practices. This would be especially useful in the majority of clinical practices around the world where they do not have access to laboratory microbiology facilities,” said Dr. Parwez Hossain, Associate Professor of Ophthalmology at the University of Southampton.

The study also showed that faster application of topical steroids such as prednisolone could reduce the inflammatory response.

“Our findings also show that treatment could start within 72 hours of the symptoms presenting themselves to give the best chance of full visual recovery in patients with suspected bacterial keratitis. OCT or examination of a patients cytokine features in clinics makes this possible this should be the basis for a larger-scale clinical evaluation of this approach to treat a significant global health problem,” said Dr. Hossain.

Full news release: https://southampton.ac.uk/news/2020/11/bacterial-keratitis-imaging.page

Source: University of Southampton

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