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The Role of Topical Povidone-Iodine in the Management of Infectious Keratitis: A Pilot Study.

Emilio PedrottiErika BonacciRaphael KilianCamilla PagnaccoAdriano FasoloMarco AnastasiGessica ManziniFrancesca BoselloGiorgio Marchini
Published in: Journal of clinical medicine (2022)
The aim of this prospective explorative study was to evaluate the safety and the effectiveness of topical polyvinylpyrrolidone-iodine (PVP-I) administered during the time-to-results period for pathogen identification and susceptibility testing in patients with infectious keratitis (IK). A corneal swab (CS) for antimicrobial evaluation was performed at enrollment (T0) and topical 0.66%-PVP-I was administered until the laboratory results were available (T1). Ulcer and infiltrate areas and infiltrate depths were compared between T0 and T1 (i.e., time-to-result period). Patients were then shifted to a specific antimicrobial therapy and followed up until resolution of their infiltrates (Tlast-TL). Twenty-five eyes were enrolled, and none showed clinical worsening leading to protocol withdrawal. At T1, ulcer and infiltrate areas showed significant improvement in Gram-positive IK ( n = 13-52%; p = 0.027 and p = 0.019, respectively), remained stable in fungal IK ( n = 5-20%; both p = 0.98) and increased in those with Gram-negative bacteria ( n = 4-16%; p = 0.58 and p = 0.27). Eyes with negative cultures ( n = 3-12%) showed complete resolution at T1 and did not initiate any additional antimicrobial therapy. The administration of 0.66% PVP-I during the time-to-result period seems to be a safe strategy in patients with IK while often sparing broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents. In addition, it showed to be effective in eyes with a Gram-positive bacterial infection.
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