1. Determinants of Outcomes of Adenoviral Keratoconjunctivitis
- Author
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Anshu Sahai, Damien Macaluso, Shree Kumar Reddy, Malavika Krishnaswamy, Nivedita Patil, M. Wijetunge, Gregg J. Berdy, James D. Branch, Bernard R. Perez, Nagappa Somshekhar, Charith Fonseka, Deepak Mehta, P.S. Girija Devi, Neil Shmunes, Shobha Kini, Russell N. Van Gelder, El-Roy Dixon, Anna Maria Hofling-Lima, Stephanie Becker, P.N. Biswas, Walton Nosé, Jacob Moyses Cohen, Lawerence E. Roel, James Chodosh, Syamala H.K. Reddy, Radhika Tandon, Michael Tepedino, Lakshmi Akileswaran, D. Wariyapola, Anna Wald, Sherif M. El-Harazi, Sérgio Kwitko, Ramon C. Ghanem, D.R. Kodikara, Andrew L. Moyes, Roberta De Ventura, K.A. Salvin, Kathryn Najafi-Tagol, Stephen J. Smith, Narasimha Rao, Maria Cristina Nishiwaki Dantas, Nita Shanbag, Aaron Y. Lee, Joshua Herz, Virendra Agarwal, David W. Stroman, Sergio Luis Gianotti Pimentel, Jack V. Greiner, Prashant Garg, Yasmin Bhagat, Jonathan I. Macy, Amalia Magaret, Champa Banagala, Vupputuri Venkata Lakshmi, Cecilia S Lee, Anju Kochar, Adriana dos Santos Forseto, Rubens Belfort, Manisha Acharya, George Nardin, Mary Abraham, Priti Kapadia, Larry L Lothringer, and Steve Kleiboeker
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Visual acuity ,animal diseases ,viruses ,Adenoviridae Infections ,Keratoconjunctivitis ,Eye Infections, Viral ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,0302 clinical medicine ,Child ,Aged, 80 and over ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,Child, Preschool ,Adenoviral keratoconjunctivitis ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Viral load ,Brazil ,Adult ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,India ,Article ,Adenoviridae ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Sri Lanka ,business.industry ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,Eye infection ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Epidemic Keratoconjunctivitis ,Ophthalmology ,ophthalmology ,030104 developmental biology ,DNA, Viral ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose To determine host and pathogen factors predictive of outcomes in a large clinical cohort with keratoconjunctivitis. Design Retrospective analyses of the clinical and molecular data from a randomized, controlled, masked trial for auricloscene for keratoconjunctivitis (NVC-422 phase IIB, NovaBay; clinicaltrials.gov identifier, NCT01877694). Participants Five hundred participants from United States, India, Brazil, and Sri Lanka with clinical diagnosis of keratoconjunctivitis and positive rapid test results for adenovirus. Methods Clinical signs and symptoms and bilateral conjunctival swabs were obtained on days 1, 3, 6, 11, and 18. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis was performed to detect and quantify adenovirus in all samples. Regression models were used to evaluate the association of various variables with keratoconjunctivitis outcomes. Time to resolution of each symptom or sign was assessed by adenoviral species with Cox regression. Main Outcome Measures The difference in composite scores of clinical signs between days 1 and 18, mean visual acuity change between days 1 and 18, and time to resolution of each symptom or sign. Results Of 500 participants, 390 (78%) showed evidence of adenovirus by PCR. Among adenovirus-positive participants, adenovirus D species was most common (63% of total cases), but a total of 4 species and 21 different types of adenovirus were detected. Adenovirus D was associated with more severe signs and symptoms, a higher rate of subepithelial infiltrate development, and a slower decline in viral load compared with all other adenovirus species. The clinical courses of all patients with non–adenovirus D species infection and adenovirus-negative keratoconjunctivitis were similar. Mean change in visual acuity between days 1 and 18 was a gain of 1.9 letters; worse visual outcome was associated with older age. Conclusions A substantial proportion of keratoconjunctivitis is not associated with a detectable adenovirus. The clinical course of those with adenovirus D keratoconjunctivitis is significantly more severe than those with non–adenovirus D species infections or adenovirus-negative keratoconjunctivitis; high viral load at presentation and non-United States origin of participants is associated with poorer clinical outcome.
- Published
- 2018
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