Literature DB >> 32461487

COVID-19 and eye banking.

Sunita Chaurasia1, Namrata Sharma2, Sujata Das3.   

Abstract

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Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32461487      PMCID: PMC7508064          DOI: 10.4103/ijo.IJO_1033_20

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol        ISSN: 0301-4738            Impact factor:   1.848


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Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has rapidly emerged as a global health threat. The virus was officially named as “severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2” (SARS-Cov-2).[1] According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the incubation period of COVID-19 falls within 2–14 days.[2] The incubation period can be as long as 24 days. Symptoms of the infection include fever, cough, fatigue, breathlessness, loss of sense of smell, and diarrhea. Conjunctivitis has also been reported in a small proportion of patients.[3] The disease-causing viral agent is highly contagious and believed to be transmitted through respiratory droplets and/or contact with an infected person. Transmission via ocular surface has also been reported.[3] Various infection control measures have been evolved in the last few months to minimize the spread of infection to both patients and health care workers. Hospitals have adopted a triage system to minimize cross-infection. Elective surgeries in all specialties, including ophthalmology, have been suspended since the last week of March 2020. Guidelines are evolving regarding protective measures to be adopted by doctors and paramedics. There are specific guidelines for ophthalmologists while examining patients in slit-lamp. Eye Banking is an integral component of eye care services. The present times brought in several deviations from the existing eye bank practices. The eye banking activities would need strategic planning for the future when the situation normalizes. The pandemic has made the eye bankers reflect and introspect crisis that can occur and help devise a plan to handle a similar situation if it arises in the future. The functions of the eye bank comprise collection (harvesting), evaluation, preservation, and distribution of corneal tissue. The donor cornea is harvested by trained eye bank technicians, ophthalmologists, and general practitioners in a variety of settings like home, ward, and mortuary. Donor cornea, however, carries the unknown and unquantifiable risk of transmission of disease to the recipient that falls into three main categories: infections, neoplasms, and corneal disorders. The contraindication list for eye bank is relatively well laid down, with slight variations globally. The list of contraindications is divided into relative and absolute. Harvesting eyes from donors with conditions potentially hazardous to eye bank personnel should be strictly avoided. Therefore, death due to COVID-19 will fall into this category. The second category of contraindication includes conditions with the potential risk of transmission of local or systemic communicable disease from donor to recipient. Since there is a risk of transmission via ocular surface, it carries a risk of transmission to the recipient. It is too early to have evidence that SARS-CoV-2 can be transmitted by blood transfusion or tissue transplantation. While deaths due to proven COVID-19 can be avoided, without a doubt, the challenge remains how we screen death due to other causes, where there might be a subclinical infection or undiagnosed cases of fever and pneumonia. Maybe a rapid screening test for all donors can help to rule out in the future. The harvesting can be planned after following a triage system that is used in clinics.[4] The detailed history may be elicited from family members before collection. The collection can be restricted only to the death cases due to completely nonrelated causes like a road traffic accident, hanging, poisoning, etc., Those on ventilators of any time duration should be avoided. Postmortem is performed for all of the above cases. The protocol followed in mortuary needs close vigilance, especially during such pandemic. The clinical and serological evaluation may not carry specific risks as long as persons handling tissues use general precautions like other health care workers in a hospital setting. It is not worth taking the risk to place counselors in various hospitals during the pandemic period if tissue is not going to be utilized. Since elective surgeries are suspended during the pandemic, the collected tissues may be wasted. We may consider the use of preservative media like Cornisol, where tissue can be preserved for 10–14 days if it is collected from voluntary cases. Although elective surgeries like optical keratoplasty can be postponed, there is a need for emergency therapeutic and tectonic keratoplasty. In India, the most frequent indications of corneal transplantation are infection.[5] Currently, most of the eye banks in India have discontinued collection through the Hospital Corneal Retrieval Program, which is a major source of cornea collection. The challenge is to manage large perforation and/or large infiltrate, especially one-eyed patients, in an emergency. We have to fall back on alternative procedures like glycerin-preserved cornea, tissue adhesive (small perforation), conjunctival hood, complete tarsorrhaphy, etc., for tectonic purposes as an interim measure of managing the globe threatening conditions. Although we do not have surplus optical quality tissue, we can plan to preserve tissues either in glycerol or gamma irradiation, which have been discarded due to causes other than seropositive reasons. In view of the prevailing uncertainties related to a state of normalcy, when eye banking activities can be restored to original times, there is also a need to establish guidelines on ways to restart eye banking activities in the future. Each eye bank has to come up with a plan that works in a specific geographical location keeping a track of the updates on the stage of spread of the COVID-19 disease in the area of operation of the eye bank. Stringent safety measures need to be adopted by the eye bank technicians that would include personal protection equipment during donor cornea retrieval. The eye banking activities should be initiated in a calibrated manner in those areas where no cases of active infection are reported. With the addition of new disease, the list of contraindications gets added up. Therefore, it should be a dynamic document. The decrease in the collection will increase the burden of the preexisting gap of demand-supply of corneal tissue. This pandemic is an opportunity to brainstorm innovative newer methods for long-term storage of corneal tissue, especially for an emergency like this in the future.
  3 in total

1.  2019-nCoV transmission through the ocular surface must not be ignored.

Authors:  Cheng-Wei Lu; Xiu-Fen Liu; Zhi-Fang Jia
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2020-02-06       Impact factor: 79.321

2.  Procurement, storage and utilization trends of eye banks in India.

Authors:  Namrata Sharma; Tarun Arora; Deepali Singhal; Prafulla K Maharana; Prashant Garg; Ritu Nagpal; Somasheila Murthy; Srinivas Gunnam; Aditya Arora; Venkatesh Prajna; Revathi Rajaraman; Prema Padmanabhan; Arvind Kumar; Rajiv Kumar; Swati Tomar; Anila Thomas; Rekha Gyanchand; Ritu Arora; Bani Biswas; Samar Basak
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2019-07       Impact factor: 1.848

3.  Stepping up infection control measures in ophthalmology during the novel coronavirus outbreak: an experience from Hong Kong.

Authors:  Tracy H T Lai; Emily W H Tang; Sandy K Y Chau; Kitty S C Fung; Kenneth K W Li
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-03-03       Impact factor: 3.535

  3 in total
  11 in total

1.  Bioengineered corneal tissue for minimally invasive vision restoration in advanced keratoconus in two clinical cohorts.

Authors:  Mehrdad Rafat; Mahmoud Jabbarvand; Namrata Sharma; Maria Xeroudaki; Shideh Tabe; Raha Omrani; Muthukumar Thangavelu; Anthony Mukwaya; Per Fagerholm; Anton Lennikov; Farshad Askarizadeh; Neil Lagali
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2022-08-11       Impact factor: 68.164

2.  Challenges in management of microbial keratitis during COVID-19 pandemic related lockdown: a comparative analysis with pre pandemic data.

Authors:  Aravind Roy; Minal Kanhere; Mugundhan Rajarajan; Rohit Dureja; Bhupesh Bagga; Sujata Das; Savitri Sharma; Ashik Mohammed; Merle Fernandes
Journal:  Int Ophthalmol       Date:  2022-10-22       Impact factor: 2.029

3.  Corneal transplant during COVID-19 pandemic: the Italian Eye Bank national report.

Authors:  Francesco Aiello; Federico Genzano Besso; Giulio Pocobelli; Gabriele Gallo Afflitto; Rossella Anna Maria Colabelli Gisoldi; Carlo Nucci; Diego Ponzin
Journal:  Cell Tissue Bank       Date:  2021-05-24       Impact factor: 1.522

Review 4.  A review of long-term corneal preservation techniques: Relevance and renewed interests in the COVID-19 era.

Authors:  Sunita Chaurasia; Sujata Das; Aravind Roy
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-07       Impact factor: 1.848

5.  Impact of nationwide COVID-19 lockdown on keratoplasty and eye banking in India: A survey of cornea surgeons and eye banks.

Authors:  Aravind Roy; Sunita Chaurasia; Merle Fernandes; Sujata Das
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2021-03       Impact factor: 1.848

6.  Year one of COVID-19 pandemic in India: Effect of lockdown and unlock on trends in keratoplasty at a tertiary eye centre.

Authors:  Anthony V Das; Sunita Chaurasia; Pravin K Vaddavalli; Prashant Garg
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2021-12       Impact factor: 1.848

7.  Evaluation of the Clinical Findings of Patients with Penetrating Keratoplasty Followed by Telephone Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic

Authors:  Semir Yarımada; Özlem Barut Selver; Melis Palamar
Journal:  Turk J Ophthalmol       Date:  2022-04-28

8.  Profile of donors and corneal tissue obtained through hospital cornea retrieval programme in a recently established eye bank of a tertiary care teaching hospital of Eastern India.

Authors:  Sony Sinha; Ranjeet K Sinha; Prateek Nishant
Journal:  J Family Med Prim Care       Date:  2021-07-02

9.  "Ray of light during tough times"-Role of gamma irradiated corneal tissue in emergency keratoplasty.

Authors:  Josephine S Christy; Esen K Akpek; Priya M Mathews; Srinivasan Kavitha
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-10       Impact factor: 1.848

10.  Corneal transplantation and eye banking practices during COVID-19-related lockdown period in India from a network of tertiary eye care centers.

Authors:  Arvind Roy; Sujata Das; Sunita Chaurasia; Merle Fernandes; Somasheila Murthy
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-11       Impact factor: 1.848

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