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Contact lens-related corneal infection in Australia

期刊

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL OPTOMETRY
卷 103, 期 4, 页码 408-417

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1111/cxo.13082

关键词

contact lens; microbial keratitis; microbiology; risk factors

资金

  1. Brien Holden Research Institute
  2. Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) for Eye Research and Technology and Vision CRC, University of New South Wales Sydney Goldstar Award
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council
  4. British Contact Lens Association
  5. CIBA Vision
  6. Alcon Laboratories
  7. CooperVision

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Microbial keratitis is a rare but potentially severe sight-threatening condition, associated with societal burden, cost and morbidity. Compared with microbial keratitis without lens wear, the disease in contact lens wear is more common, occurs at an earlier age, has lower morbidity and is more often caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acanthamoeba spp. Resistance to common antibiotics is infrequent in contact lens-related isolates and there is little evidence to suggest increasing bacterial resistance over time. There is some evidence for increased reporting of cases of Acanthamoeba keratitis internationally. The incidence of contact lens-related microbial keratitis has remained stable over time. Rates vary with wear modality, with the lowest risk of severe disease in daily disposable and rigid gas permeable contact lens wear; however, there are limited studies in daily wear silicone hydrogel and in contemporary daily disposable contact lenses. Risk factors for contact lens-related microbial keratitis can be either modifiable or non-modifiable and interventions to reduce the risk of, or severity of disease may be prioritised based on the attributable risk. Key risk factors based on high attributable risk include any overnight wear, failing to wash and dry hands prior to handling lenses and poor storage case hygiene practice. The strong link between microbial keratitis and storage case hygiene and replacement suggests the relevance of microbial contamination of the storage case. Both risk factors and evidence-based strategies for limiting storage case contamination are presented, including storage case cleaning protocols and antimicrobial storage cases; however, it is unclear if such interventions can ultimately limit the rate or severity of microbial keratitis in daily wear. Emerging challenges include understanding and limiting the risk of infection associated with decorative or cosmetic contact lens wear, particularly in Asia, and in understanding the safety of contact lens modalities for myopia control in a paediatric population

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