| Literature DB >> 34017884 |
Anuj Kumar Pandey1, Nidhi Mudgil1, Yogesh Wadgave1, Sidharth Sekhar Mishra1.
Abstract
Corneal blindness is the fourth leading cause of blindness worldwide, with 10 million people having bilateral corneal blindness, nearly 80% of all corneal blindness cases are avoidable and are reversible. Corneal transplantation (CT) is the most frequently performed type of transplant across the world. This review was conducted with the objective of identifying if it is safe to harvest the cornea from the patients died due to COVID-19 and preventing the chances of transmission from donor to the recipient or healthcare worker handling the harvested cornea. A total of 45 articles were found with the keywords and out of all, only 16 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. RT-PCR is the technique of choice for detection of virus in the corpse and the sample analyzed was a pharyngeal swab. Available literature states unavailability of sufficient evidence-based studies proving presence of virus in the cornea or tear of COVID affected patients There is no proven consensus on presence of Virus in cornea. It is important to follow preferred practice guidelines so as to restart eye banking and do at least the emergency surgeries without having risk of disease transmission and keeping ourselves safe.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; corneal harvesting; corneal transplantation; eye banking
Year: 2021 PMID: 34017884 PMCID: PMC8116183 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2021014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIMS Public Health ISSN: 2327-8994
Summary of articles on corneal transplantation during COVID pandemic.
| Sr No | Author Name | Methodology | Results/Recommendations |
| 1. | Sawant O.B. et al. | n = 33 surgical-intended donors | Of 132 ocular tissues from 33 surgical-intended donors, the positivity rate for SARS-CoV-2 RNA was 13% (17/132). Study recommends post-mortem nasopharyngeal PCR testing and PVP-I disinfection protocol to eliminate any tissue harboring SARS-CoV-2 being used for corneal transplantation. |
| 2. | Roy A. et al. | Descriptive study of the challenges faced in eye banking during lockdown, and practices adopted to overcome | Immediate drastic reduction of donor retrieval. Shift to glycerol preservation. Cessation of precut tissues for posterior lamellar surgeries. Resumption of donor cornea retrieval guidelines. Patient triage for keratoplasty and alternatives to emergency keratoplasty. |
| 3. | Desautels JD et al. | Review of recommendations made by various health agencies/authorities for retrieving Cornea. | Study recommends povidone-iodine does not accomplish complete sterilization, and by no means it eliminates the possibility of viral retention within ocular structures. Infection of deeper cellular layers of corneal donor tissue remains a possibility, and warrants additional study. |
| 4. | Fernández-Rodríguez A et al. | Review of microbiological aspects of COVID-19 infection | No Study reports use of more than one type of sample for microbiological analysis No specific tests are being recommended to use in corpses. Samples to be taken prior to autopsy, more specifically NPS and pharyngeal swab. |
| 5. | Global Alliance of Eye Banking Association | Global committee (GAEBA) alert about Coronavirus (COVID-2019) and Ocular Tissue Donation | Risk to donor ocular tissue is considered low. There have been no reported cases of transmission of SARS-CoV-2, MERS-CoV, or any other coronavirus via transplantation of human ocular tissue. A recent study reported that no SARSCoV-2-RNA was detected in the cornea, conjunctiva, or aqueous humor of five COVID-19 positive post-mortem donors. |
| 6. | Welsh Government COVID-19 Technical Advisory | Technical Advisory | No data is currently available on the frequency of detection of SARS-CoV-2, by RT-PCR on postmortem swabs collected at different durations after death. If COVID-19 testing on postmortem swab specimens is done, SARS-CoV-2 RNA may still be detected up to 3 days postmortem and possibly longer based on available data from experiences with MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV; however, sensitivity may be reduced with a longer postmortem interval, and duration of illness may need to be considered in interpreting a negative result. Thus, in cases where there is a clinical indication for diagnostic testing, samples may be taken within 3 days of death for RT-PCR testing with a reasonable likelihood of detecting virus if present. |
| 7. | Guidelines on postmortem testing | Guidelines on Postmortem Testing for Natural Deaths by Department of Health republic of South Sudan | A single postmortem nasopharyngeal swab (NP swab) is preferred. When the collection of a postmortem NP swab is not possible, an oropharyngeal (OP) specimen, A nasal mid-turbinate (NMT) swab, an anterior naris (nasal swab; NS) specimen, Nasopharyngeal wash/aspirate, or nasal aspirate (NA) specimen will be preferred. |
| 8. | Ang M, Moriyama A et al. | None | Eye Bank Association of America (EBAA) and the Global Alliance of Eye Bank Associations (GAEBA) have recommended excluding donors recently infected with COVID-19, or those at high-risk such as a significant contact history. US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) indicate that there is currently no evidence for transmission of respiratory viruses through tissue transplantation in general. Eye Bank Association of Australia & New Zealand (EBAANZ) and European Centre of Disease Control advises against routine testing for donors due to limited test kits, which are also not validated for use in deceased patients. Further studies on the validity of SARSCoV-2 PCR tests on deceased donors are needed to inform policy decisions on donor testing requirements. |
| 9. | Toro M et al. | Commentary | Study did not find any evidence to substantiate that harvested corneal grafts from COVID-19 patients can contain SARS-CoV-2 virus and lead to a systemic infection. Although risk of transmission through corneal stromal tissue is low, but it potentially exists. Study recommends that the blood samples of all donors should be screened with RT-PCR tests and nasopharyngeal swabs should be taken. |
| 10. | Amesty MA et al. | Review | Study found that although there is a low prevalence of SARS-CoV2 in tears, it is possible to transmit the disease through ocular secretions. The relationship between COVID-19 and the ocular surface as a potential portal of entry and as a transmission mechanism is currently under discussion due to the high transmission rate of the disease. |
| 11. | Chaurasia S et al. | Editorial | Donor cornea, however, carries the unknown and unquantifiable risk of transmission of disease to the recipient. 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. |
| 12. | Ballouz et al. | Review | There is evidence that transmission through blood donation and organ or tissue transplantation is possible. SARS-CoV-2 has been detected in conjunctival swabs of infected patients, and the ocular surface may play an important role in viral entry. The risk of SARS-CoV-2 transmission through corneal transplantation is likely low. However, tissue screening guidelines need to be re-evaluated regularly as knowledge regarding the SARS-CoV-2 virus evolves |
| 13 | Kates OS et al. | Review | Study found that the current data provide little evidence to suggest the presence of intact transmissible SARS-CoV in organs that can potentially be transplanted. |
| 14 | Mukhra R et al. | Review | Till date, there is a single report of conjunctivitis along with the viral RNA in the tear body fluid. However, an absence of the virus in the patients' conjunctival sac implicated an unusual route of transmission of SARS-CoV-2. Study recommends more research to develop a detailed understanding of the transmission mechanism through tear secretions and ocular surfaces. |
| 15 | Sharma N et al. | None | Paper highlights the consensus-based guidelines by an expert panel comprising of representatives from the All-India. Ophthalmological Society (AIOS), Eye Bank Association of India (EBAI), Indian Society of Cornea and Kerato refractive surgeons (ISKRS), Cornea society of India (CSI) and major governmental and private ophthalmological institutions in India. |
| 16 | Siedlecki J et al. | Review (n = 21) | The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV 2, currently causing the COVID-19 pandemic, has severe implications for ophthalmology—be it because the eyes represent an important route of infection, most probably through lacrimal drainage into the nasal mucosa, or because of ocular manifestations, which, even if rather rare, can represent the first symptoms of this novel disease. |