Pseudomonas aeruginosa keratitis: outcomes and response to corticosteroid
treatment.
Author(s): Sy A, Srinivasan M, Mascarenhas J, Lalitha P, Rajaraman R, Ravindran M, Oldenburg
CE, Ray KJ, Glidden D, Zegans ME, McLeod SD, Lietman TM, Acharya NR.
Affiliation(s): F. I. Proctor Foundation, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco,
CA, USA.
Publication date & source: 2012, Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. , 53(1):267-72
PURPOSE: To compare the clinical course and effect of adjunctive corticosteroid
therapy in Pseudomonas aeruginosa with those of all other strains of bacterial
keratitis.
METHODS: Subanalyses were performed on data collected in the Steroids for Corneal
Ulcers Trial (SCUT), a large randomized controlled trial in which patients were
treated with moxifloxacin and were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 adjunctive
treatment arms: corticosteroid or placebo (4 times a day with subsequent
reduction). Multivariate analysis was used to determine the effect of predictors,
organism, and treatment on outcomes, 3-month best-spectacle-corrected visual
acuity (BSCVA), and infiltrate/scar size. The incidence of adverse events over a
3-month follow-up period was compared using Fisher's exact test.
RESULTS: SCUT enrolled 500 patients. One hundred ten patients had P. aeruginosa
ulcers; 99 of 110 (90%) enrolled patients returned for follow-up at 3 months.
Patients with P. aeruginosa ulcers had significantly worse visual acuities than
patients with other bacterial ulcers (P = 0.001) but showed significantly more
improvement in 3-month BSCVA than those with other bacterial ulcers, adjusting
for baseline characteristics (-0.14 logMAR; 95% confidence interval, -0.23 to
-0.04; P = 0.004). There was no significant difference in adverse events between
P. aeruginosa and other bacterial ulcers. There were no significant differences
in BSCVA (P = 0.69), infiltrate/scar size (P = 0.17), and incidence of adverse
events between patients with P. aeruginosa ulcers treated with adjunctive
corticosteroids and patients given placebo.
CONCLUSIONS: Although P. aeruginosa corneal ulcers have a more severe
presentation, they appear to respond better to treatment than other bacterial
ulcers. The authors did not find a significant benefit with corticosteroid
treatment, but they also did not find any increase in adverse events.
(ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00324168.).
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