| Literature DB >> 32660508 |
Cristina Martin1, Thomas Tschernig2, Hamon Loic1, Loay Daas1, Berthold Seitz1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Explanted corneae are highly needed for the surgical management of patients with severe corneal diseases. The aim of this study was to determine whether the body donors from the Institute of Anatomy are a suitable source of donor corneae.Entities:
Keywords: Anatomy; Body donors; Cornea transplantation; Donor cornea; Eye bank
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32660508 PMCID: PMC7359266 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-020-01546-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Fig. 1The development of keratoplasties at the Department of Ophthalmology, Saarland University Medical Center (UKS), Germany. Number of keratoplasties at the Department of Ophthalmology, Saarland University Medical Center (UKS), Germany, since the foundation of the LIONS Eye Bank Saar - Lor - Lux, Trier/Westpfalz
Fig. 2The development of corneal explantations at the Department of Ophthalmology, Saarland University Medical Center (UKS), Germany. Number of corneal explantations at the Department of Ophthalmology, Saarland University Medical Center (UKS), Germany, since the foundation of the LIONS Eye Bank Saar - Lor - Lux, Trier/Westpfalz
Extended list of contraindications to cornea prelevation at the Department of Ophthalmology, Saarland University Medical Center (UKS), Germany
| Unknown cause of death or significant disease of unknown etiology in the medical history | |
| Viral donor diseases: Infection with HIV, hepatitis B/C, HTLV I/II | |
| Bacterial donor diseases: Syphilis or other chronic persistent bacterial infections (brucellosis, typhus, rickettsioses, leprosy, relapsing fever, tularemia) | |
| Protozoonotic donor diseases: Babesiosis, trypanosomiasis (e.g., Chagas disease), Leishmaniasis | |
| Active systemic infections: bacterial, viral, fungal, parasitic or of unclear etiology | |
| Fungal sepsis or sepsis with multi-resistant germs (a bacterial sepsis with usual spectrum is not a contraindication) | |
| Central nervous disorders of unknown cause: (M. Alzheimer, M. Parkinson, unclear fast progressive Dementia, Multiple Sclerosis, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis) | |
| Hematological neoplasias, leukemias, lymphomas | |
| Ophthalmic donor diseases with visible change in the cornea (corneal surgery, local infections, tumors of the eye) | |
| Risk of disease transmission by prions: recipients of dura mater, cornea, sclera, hetero- or xenografts; recipients of pituitary hormones | |
| Premortal uptake of substances that by transplanting can lead to a harmful effect (poisons, heavy metals) | |
| Donors who had premortal blood transfusion in the last 48 h with a limit of 22.5 ml per kg of body weight | |
Time-limited exclusion: 2 years after healing: Salmonellosis, Q fever; Tuberculosis, Leptospirosis; 4 years after the cure of Malaria; 4 weeks after healing of Measles, Rubella, VZV | |
| Risk for ZIKA virus infection: (clinical signs of infection or stay within the last 28 days before death in a Zika virus endemic area (Uganda, Africa, Asia Micronesia, French Polynesia, Brazil, Columbia, Venezuela, Central America)) | |
| Infections with MRSA / ESBL / VRSA |
Fig. 3Schematic presentation of study results (January 2018 – June 2019)
Fig. 4Age distribution of body donors. Distribution of age in 49 included body donors from the Institute of Anatomy
Distribution of death cause of all 49 body donors from the Institute of Anatomy
| Death cause in body donors | Frequency n. (%) |
|---|---|
| Cardiogenic Shock | 10 (20.3%) |
| Multiorgan insufficiency | 8 (16.4%) |
| Heart insufficiency | 7 (14.4%) |
| Pneumonia | 4 (8.3%) |
| Lung Cancer | 3 (6.2%) |
| Respiratory insufficiency | 2 (4.1%) |
| Stroke | 2 (4.1%) |
| Sepsis | 2 (4.1%) |
| Not defined | 2 (4.1%) |
| Liver metastasis | 1 (2.0%) |
| Lung oedema | 1 (2.0%) |
| Malnutrition | 1 (2.0%) |
| Atrial fibrilation | 1 (2.0%) |
| Lung embolie | 1 (2.0%) |
| Encephalopathie | 1 (2.0%) |
| COPD | 1 (2.0%) |
| Cholangitis | 1 (2.0%) |
| Urosepsis | 1 (2.0%) |
| Total | 49 (100%) |
Fig. 5ECN in transplanted corneae. Distribution of endothelial cells number (ECN) in transplanted corneae from the body donors of the Institute of Anatomy
Differences between corneae from the Institute of Anatomy and other procurement sites
| Parameter | Procurement site of corneae | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Institute of Anatomy | other corneae sources | ||
| Mean ECN in all excised corneae, cells/mm2 | 2109 ± 67 | 2424 ± 17 | |
| Mean ECN in transplanted corneae, cells/mm2 | 2350 ± 57 | 2566 ± 15 | |
| Penetrating Keratoplasty, n (%) | 24 (52.3%) | 321 (59.2%) | |
| DMEK, n (%) | 13 (28.2) | 163 (31.1%) | |
| PKP á chaud, n (%) | 7 (15.2%) | 54 (9.9%) | |
Fig. 6ECN and donor age correlation in the transplanted corneae. Correlation between the endothelial cell number (ECN) and the age of transplanted corneae from the body donors of the Institute of Anatomy