| Literature DB >> 34896126 |
Jeremy J Hoffman1, Reena Yadav2, Sandip D Sanyam2, Pankaj Chaudhary2, Abhishek Roshan2, Sanjay K Singh3, Sanjay K Singh3, Sailesh K Mishra4, Simon Arunga5, Victor H Hu6, David Macleod7, Astrid Leck6, Matthew J Burton8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate if topical chlorhexidine 0.2%, which is low cost and easy to formulate, is noninferior to topical natamycin 5% for the treatment of filamentous fungal keratitis.Entities:
Keywords: Chlorhexidine; Clinical trial; Corneal ulcer; Fungal keratitis; Natamycin; Nepal
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34896126 PMCID: PMC9037000 DOI: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2021.12.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmology ISSN: 0161-6420 Impact factor: 14.277
Figure 1Trial profile. A total of 135 patients physically attended clinic for their 90-day follow-up in the chlorhexidine 0.2% arm, with additional visual acuity outcome data available in 18 patients (because they had undergone therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty or eye removal surgery), and 145 patients physically attended clinic for their 90-day follow-up in the natamycin 5% (NATA) arm, with additional visual acuity outcome data available in 8 patients (because they had undergone therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty or eye removal surgery or had no perception of light vision in the affected eye due to acute glaucoma). Ninety-day best spectacle-corrected visual acuity (BSCVA) outcome data were unavailable in 2 patients who attended in the NATA arm because these patients were reviewed at home. ˆ Mixed fungal-bacterial infections are excluded from the primary analysis but included in the secondary analysis. There were 25 mixed infections in total (15 in the chlorhexidine 0.2% arm, 10 in the NATA arm) at baseline. At the day 90 follow-up, outcome data were available for 12 mixed infections in the chlorhexidine 0.2% arm and for 8 in the NATA arm. Mixed infections included the following: filamentous fungus plus any of gram-positive cocci (n = 9), gram positive bacilli (n = 6), gram negative cocci (n = 2), Staphylococcus aureus (n = 3), Streptococcus pneumoniae (n = 2), Corynebacterium spp. (n = 1), and Streptococcus spp. (n = 2). COVID = coronavirus; FK = fungal keratitis; LTFU = lost to follow-up; MK = microbial keratitis; RCT = randomized controlled trial. # Ninety-day best spectacle-corrected visual acuity (BSCVA) outcome data were unavailable in 2 patients who attended in the NATA arm because these patients were reviewed at home.
Baseline Demographic and Clinical Characteristics for All Enrolled Patients (including Mixed Infections)
| Chlorhexidine (n = 178) | Natamycin (n = 176) | Total (N = 354) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, yrs | 46.1 | (13.5) | 48.2 | (13.0) | 46.9 | (13.3) |
| Sex | ||||||
| Male | 73 | (41.0%) | 62 | (35.2%) | 135 | (38.1%) |
| Female | 105 | (59.0%) | 114 | (64.8%) | 219 | (61.9%) |
| Literacy | ||||||
| Illiterate | 139 | (78.1%) | 138 | (78.4%) | 277 | (78.3%) |
| Little Nepali (read/write) | 16 | (8.99%) | 14 | (7.95%) | 30 | (8.47%) |
| Nepali well (read/write) | 9 | (5.06%) | 15 | (8.52%) | 24 | (6.78%) |
| English and Nepali (read/write) | 14 | (7.87%) | 9 | (5.11%) | 23 | (6.50%) |
| Marital status | ||||||
| Single | 6 | (3.37%) | 3 | (1.70%) | 9 | (2.54%) |
| Married | 161 | (90.5%) | 164 | (93.2%) | 325 | (91.8%) |
| Divorced | 2 | (1.12%) | 3 | (1.70%) | 5 | (1.41%) |
| Widowed | 9 | (5.06%) | 6 | (3.41%) | 15 | (4.24%) |
| Occupation | ||||||
| Agriculture | 91 | (51.1%) | 98 | (55.7%) | 189 | (53.4%) |
| Nonagriculture | 87 | (48.9%) | 78 | (44.3%) | 165 | (46.6%) |
| Trauma | ||||||
| Vegetative matter/wood | 73 | (41.0%) | 73 | (41.5%) | 146 | (41.2%) |
| Other | 19 | (10.7%) | 18 | (10.2%) | 37 | (10.5%) |
| Unknown object | 2 | (1.12%) | 1 | (0.06%) | 3 | (0.85%) |
| Contact lens | 0 | (0%) | 0 | 0 | ||
| No history of trauma/unknown | 84 | (47.2%) | 84 | (47.7%) | 168 | (47.5%) |
| Previous treatment | ||||||
| No | 32 | (18.0%) | 28 | (15.9%) | 60 | (17.0%) |
| Yes | 146 | (82.0%) | 148 | (84.1%) | 294 | (83.1%) |
| Previous topical steroids | 33 | (18.5%) | 26 | (14.8%) | 59 | (16.7%) |
| Previous TEM | 2 | (1.12%) | 3 | (1.7%) | 5 | (1.41%) |
| Previous antibiotics | 120 | (67.4%) | 129 | (73.3%) | 249 | (70.3%) |
| Previous other topical | 70 | (39.3%) | 60 | (34.1%) | 130 | (36.7%) |
| Previous systemic medication | 88 | (49.4%) | 81 | (46.0%) | 169 | (47.7%) |
| Laterality | ||||||
| Right | 78 | (43.8%) | 89 | (50.6%) | 167 | (47.2%) |
| Left | 100 | (56.2%) | 87 | (49.4%) | 187 | (52.8%) |
| BSCVA | ||||||
| Mean (logMAR) | 0.65 | (0.62) | 0.56 | (0.57) | 0.61 | (0.60) |
| Median (logMAR) ˆ | 0.45 | (0.12–1.00) | 0.38 | (0.12–0.80) | 0.40 | (0.12–0.90) |
| 6/5–6/12 | 61 | (34.27%) | 76 | (43.18%) | 137 | (38.70%) |
| >6/12–6/18 | 40 | (22.47%) | 31 | (17.61%) | 71 | (20.06%) |
| >6/18–6/60 | 34 | (19.10%) | 39 | (22.16%) | 73 | (20.62%) |
| >6/60–3/60 | 3 | (1.69%) | 3 | (1.70%) | 6 | (1.69%) |
| >3/60–1/60 (CF) | 36 | (20.22%) | 22 | (12.50%) | 58 | (16.38%) |
| >1/60 (CF) no light perception | 4 | (2.25%) | 5 | (2.84%) | 9 | (2.54%) |
| Contrast sensitivity ˆ | 0.98 | (0.45–1.20) | 1.05 | (0.75– 1.35) | 1.05 | (0.60–1.35) |
| Baseline infiltrate size (mm) | ||||||
| Median ˆ | 2.55 | (1.75–3.70) | 2.50 | (1.68–3.70) | 2.50 | (1.75–3.70) |
| Median ˆ | 2.55 | (1.75–3.70) | 2.50 | (1.68–3.70) | 2.50 | (1.75–3.70) |
| ≤0.5 | 0 | (0%) | 1 | (0.57%) | 1 | (0.28%) |
| >0.5–1.5 | 30 | (16.85%) | 32 | (18.18%) | 62 | (17.51%) |
| >1.5–2.5 | 58 | (32.58%) | 59 | (33.52%) | 117 | (33.05%) |
| >2.5–3.5 | 36 | (20.22%) | 35 | (19.89%) | 71 | (20.06%) |
| >3.5–4.5 | 26 | (14.61%) | 26 | (14.77%) | 52 | (14.69%) |
| >4.5–5.5 | 13 | (7.30%) | 11 | (6.25%) | 24 | (6.78%) |
| >5.5–6.5 | 5 | (2.81%) | 5 | (2.84%) | 10 | (2.82%) |
| >6.5–7.5 | 5 | (2.81%) | 4 | (2.27%) | 9 | (2.54%) |
| >7.5–8.5 | 1 | (0.56%) | 1 | (0.57%) | 2 | (0.56%) |
| >8.5–9.5 | 2 | (1.12%) | 2 | (1.14%) | 4 | (1.13%) |
| >9.5 | 2 | (1.12%) | 0 | (0%) | 2 | (0.56%) |
| ED, mm ˆ | 2.75 | (2.05–3.90) | 2.60 | (1.90–3.78) | 2.70 | (2.00–3.80) |
| Ulcer depth | ||||||
| 1%–25% | 117 | (65.7%) | 114 | (64.8 %) | 231 | (65.3%) |
| 26%–50% | 54 | (30.3%) | 56 | (31.8%) | 110 | (31.1%) |
| 51%–75% | 5 | (2.81%) | 6 | (3.41%) | 11 | (3.11%) |
| 76%–100% | 2 | (1.12%) | 0 | 2 | (0.56%) | |
| Presence of hypopyon | 37 | (20.8%) | 32 | (18.2%) | 69 | (19.5%) |
| Hypopyon height, mm ˆ | 0.5 | (0.3–1.0) | 0.6 | (0.2–1.0) | 0.5 | (0.3–1.0) |
| Time from symptoms to presentation, days | 8.13 | (5.93) | 8.36 | (8.35) | 8.25 | (7.22) |
| Time from trauma to presentation, days | 8.68 | (6.14) | 9.00 | (8.09) | 8.84 | (7.16) |
| Ocular surface disease | 3 | (1.69%) | 6 | (3.41%) | 9 | (2.54%) |
| Dacryostenosis or dacryocystitis | 7/168 | (4.17%) | 3/168 | (1.79%) | 10/336 | (2.98%) |
| Preexisting corneal abnormalities | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| Preexisting eyelid or eyelash abnormalities | 3 | (1.69%) | 2 | (1.14%) | 5 | (1.41%) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 1 | (0.56%) | 4 | (2.27%) | 5 | (1.41%) |
Data are n (%) or mean (standard deviation), other than where indicated with "ˆ" when the data are median (interquartile range).
BSCVA = best spectacle-corrected visual acuity; CF = counting fingers; ED = epithelial defect; logMAR = logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution; TEM = traditional eye medicine.
Includes unemployed, retired, and so forth.
Includes soil, dust, insect, cow’s tail, fingernail, chemicals, and clothes.
Some patients were receiving >1 medication at enrollment.
Includes dilating eyedrops, lubricating eyedrops, topical antivirals, topical nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and glaucoma medication.
If present.
Represents patients who had moderate to severe dry eye with significant punctate epithelial erosions, conjunctival scarring resulting from cicatrizing conjunctivitis or chemical burns, allergic eye disease, and so forth. It does not include patients with blepharitis alone.
No enrolled patients had a history of dacrocystitis or had undergone a surgical procedure for dacryostenosis before enrollment. Patients were offered nasolacrimal duct syringing as part of their clinical examination. The numbers therefore represent patients who were incidentally found to have dacryostenosis during their baseline clinical examination. Some patients refused to undertake lacrimal syringing, or it was not possible due to coronavirus disease 2019 policy (10 in chlorhexidine arm and 8 in natamycin arm).
Includes entropion, lagophthalmos, and trichiasis.
Diabetes mellitus and human immunodeficiency virus infection were the only systemic diseases that were self-reported or investigated; there were no cases of human immunodeficiency reported or detected in study participants.
Figure 2Ninety-day BSCVA versus baseline BSCVA for patients in each investigational arm (excluding mixed infections). Graph plotted with jitter added to prevent overlapping points. The red dashed line is where BSCVA at baseline and BSCVA at day 90 are the same. Note patients who have undergone a corneal graft (therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty) are allocated a BSCVA of 1.9 logarithm of the minimum angle resolution (logMAR) and those who have had their eye removed are allocated a BSCVA of 2.0 logMAR. BSCVA = best spectacle-corrected visual acuity; logMAR = logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution.
Figure 3Kaplan–Meier survival curve plotting time to full epithelialization. Patients who had undergone a therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty or those who were eviscerated are included in this figure but are by definition “not healed.” The time goes beyond the day 90 final follow-up because some patients were reviewed beyond this time because of delays resulting from the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. Data were missing for 8 patients in the chlorhexidine 0.2% arm and 9 patients in the natamycin 5% arm. CI = confidence interval.
Clinical Outcomes and Adverse Events by Treatment Group (including Mixed Infections)
| Chlorhexidine | Natamycin | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 90 BSCVA (logMAR) | |||||||
| Mean | 0.64 | (0.79) | 0.26 | (0.52) | 0.45 | (0.69) | <0.001 |
| Median ˆ | 0.2 | (0–1.7) | 0.02 | (0–0.26) | 0.1 | (0–0.58) | NA |
| 6/5–6/12 | 86/178 | (48.31%) | 119/176 | (67.61%) | 205/354 | (57.91%) | <0.001 |
| >6/12–6/18 | 9/178 | (5.06%) | 8/176 | (4.55%) | 17/354 | (4.80%) | |
| >6/18–6/60 | 10/178 | (5.62%) | 13/176 | (7.39%) | 23/354 | (6.50%) | |
| >6/60–3/60 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
| >3/60–1/60 (CF) | 26/178 | (14.61%) | 3/176 | (1.70%) | 29/354 | (8.19%) | |
| >1/60 (CF)–no light perception | 47/178 | (26.40%) | 33/176 | (18.75%) | 80/354 | (22.60%) | |
| Day 90 visual acuity (presenting, BSCVA) ˆ | 0.2 | (0–1.5) | 0 | (0–0.3) | 0.1 | (0–0.4) | |
| Day 90 scar size (mm) | |||||||
| Median ˆ | 2.3 | (1.75–3.3) | 2.25 | (1.5–3.35) | 2.25 | (1.6–3.3) | 0.837 |
| ≤2 | 49/118 | (41.5%) | 62/145 | (42.8%) | 111/263 | (42.2%) | |
| >2–4 | 50/118 | (42.4%) | 65/145 | (44.8%) | 115/263 | (43.7%) | |
| >4–6 | 15/118 | (12.7%) | 15/145 | (10.3%) | 30/263 | (11.4%) | |
| >6 | 4/118 | (3.4%) | 3/145 | (2.1%) | 7/263 | (2.7%) | |
| Day 7 hypopyon | 19/162 | (11.7%) | 31/158 | (19.6%) | 50/320 | (15.6%) | 0.064 |
| Day 7 hypopyon height, mm (median) ˆ | 0.8 | (0.2–1) | 0.5 | (0.2–1.5) | 0.55 | (0.2–1.5) | NA |
| Day 7 hypopyon height (mean) | 0.81 | (0.62) | 0.93 | (0.99) | 0.88 | (0.86) | 0.636 |
| Day 21 hypopyon | 11/144 | (7.6%) | 18/149 | (12.1%) | 29/293 | (9.9%) | 0.242 |
| Day 21 hypopyon height (median) ˆ | 1.4 | (0.3–3) | 1.1 | (0.5–1.5) | 1.2 | (0.5–1.8) | NA |
| Day 21 hypopyon height (mean) | 1.52 | (1.25) | 1.14 | (0.82) | 1.28 | (1.00) | 0.3299 |
| Day 7 culture positive | 22/83 | (26.5%) | 11/65 | (16.9%) | 33/148 | (22.3%) | 0.232 |
| Corneal perforation | 13/175 | (7.47%) | 6/173 | (3.46%) | 19/348 | (5.45%) | 0.101 |
| TPK | 11/175 | (6.28%) | 4/173 | (2.31%) | 15/348 | (4.31%) | 0.111 |
| Corneal perforation or TPK | 24/175 | (13.7%) | 10/173 | (5.79%) | 34/348 | (9.77%) | 0.018 |
| Evisceration | 8/175 | (4.6%) | 3/173 | (1.73%) | 11/348 | (3.2%) | 0.219 |
| Endophthalmitis | 0 | 0 | 0 | NA | |||
| Local allergic reaction | |||||||
| None | 155/175 | (88.6%) | 165/173 | (95.4%) | 320/348 | (92.0%) | 0.048 |
| Mild | 18/175 | (10.3%) | 8/173 | (4.6%) | 26/348 | (7.47%) | |
| Moderate | 1/175 | (0.57%) | 0/173 | 1/348 | (0.29%) | ||
| Severe | 1/175 | (0.57%) | 0/173 | 1/348 | (0.29%) | ||
| >2-mm increase in hypopyon | 3/175 | (1.71%) | 1/173 | (0.57%) | 4/348 | (1.15%) | 0.623 |
| >50% increase in infiltrate size | 13/175 | (7.42%) | 3/173 | (1.73%) | 16/348 | (4.60%) | 0.019 |
| Progressive corneal thinning to ≤50% | 13/175 | (7.42%) | 5/173 | (2.89%) | 18/348 | (5.17%) | 0.088 |
| New cataract development | 13/175 | (7.42%) | 9/173 | (5.20%) | 22/348 | (6.32%) | 0.510 |
| Persistent ED | 15/175 | (8.57%) | 0/173 | 15/348 | (4.31%) | <0.00 | |
| Corneal edema | 30/175 | (17.1%) | 11/173 | (6.36%) | 41/348 | (11.8%) | 0.002 |
| Secondary bacterial keratitis during study | 49/175 | (28.0%) | 44/173 | (25.4%) | 93/348 | (26.7%) | 0.629 |
Data are n (%) or mean (standard deviation), other than where indicated with "ˆ" when the data are median (interquartile range). There were no systemic side effects reported in either arm, including death, need for nonelective surgery or hospitalization, or myocardial infarction or stroke, and are therefore not presented here. There were no cases of intraocular pressure ≥35 mmHg for 1 week despite therapy in either arm.
BSCVA = best spectacle-corrected visual acuity; CF = counting fingers; ED = epithelial defect; logMAR = logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution; NA = not available; TPK = therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty.
The denominator represents patients who attended for at least 1 follow-up during the study period or who attended the follow-up review in question; patients who did not attend after enrollment or who did not attend the specified follow-up review (e.g., day 21) are treated as missing data and excluded from this analysis.
P value calculated by linear regression after adjusting for baseline visual acuity.
Calculated by Fisher exact test.
If present.
Calculated by t test.
All patients who were eviscerated had already perforated.
From baseline.
Secondary bacterial keratitis defined as a patient commencing a topical antibiotic during the study period because of clinical deterioration and clinical impression or as a patient who has microscopy from a corneal scrape during the study period with evidence of a bacterial infection.