Diagnostics and management approaches for Acanthamoebakeratitis

Szentmary, Nora ✉ [Szentmáry, Nóra (Szemészet), author] Department of Ophthalmology (SU / FM / C); Shi, Lei; Daas, Loay; Seitz, Berthold

English Survey paper (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: EXPERT OPINION ON ORPHAN DRUGS 2167-8707 2167-8707 8 (7) pp. 227-236 2020
  • SJR Scopus - Health Policy: Q3
Identifiers
Subjects:
  • Basic medicine
Introduction With less than 3 new cases per million people,Acanthamoebakeratitis (AK) is an orphan disease. It is a potentially devastating ocular infection without standardized guidelines for diagnostics and treatment. Areas covered A comprehensive Pubmed and Clinical Trial search has been performed to summarize current diagnostics and management approaches for AK before March 2020. Ophthalmologists must recognize its clinical signs, such as gray-dirty epithelium, pseudodendritiformic epitheliopathy, perineuritis, multifocal stromal infiltrates, and ring infiltrate for a timely adequate treatment. In later stages, scleritis, iris atrophy, anterior synechiae, secondary glaucoma, mature cataract, and chrorioretinitis are referred to as classical clinical signs. A clinical suspicion must be followed by laboratory diagnostics using confocal microscopy, polymerase-chain-reaction (PCR), microbiological culture, and/or histopathological examination. The first randomized clinical drug trial for the treatment of AK is planned to be completed in 2021. Expert opinion Up to date, as conservative treatment up to 1 year, triple-topical therapy (polyhexamethilen-biguanide, propamidine-isethionate, neomycin) and, in therapy-resistant cases, surgical treatment in form of corneal cryotherapy, riboflavin-UVA crosslinking and penetrating keratoplasty is used. In our opinion, a specific medical treatment should be clinically applied in the future, following isolation of the pathognomicAcanthamoebastrain, and afterin vitroculturing and testing.
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2025-04-26 19:21