Br J Ophthalmol 1999;83:1019-1026
( September )
Microbial decontamination of human donor eyes with
povidone-iodine: penetration, toxicity, and effectiveness
E Pels, G F J M Vrensen
Netherlands
Ophthalmic Research Institute, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Correspondence to: E Pels, PhD, Netherlands Ophthalmic Research Institute, PO Box 12141, 1100 AC Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Accepted for publication 29 April 1999
BACKGROUND/AIMS Povidone-iodine
(PVP -I) is applied for microbial decontamination of human eyes donated
for transplantation. Concentrations and immersion times vary greatly.
The effectiveness and toxicity of PVP-I were assessed for different
decontamination protocols.
METHODS Human donor
eyes and corneas were immersed in different concentrations (5-100
mg/ml) of PVP-I for different times (2-30 minutes). The penetration of
iodine into the corneal tissue was assessed by
x ray microanalysis. Microbial contamination
was determined by taking cultures of the limbal areas and storage
solutions and by incubation of the corneoscleral buttons in
antibiotic-free culture medium. Cytotoxicity of PVP-I for corneal
fibroblasts in culture was assessed using the MTT assay.
RESULTS Depending on
concentration and immersion time iodine was found to penetrate into the
epithelium, Bowman's layer, and stroma in amounts equivalent to 2-40
mg/ml PVP-I. The MTT assay demonstrated that 2.5 mg/ml PVP-I caused
total damage to fibroblasts in vitro. Rinsing eyes with tap water and
subsequent immersion in PVP-I reduced the rate of contamination from 82 out of 106 to 69 out of 106 and 37 out of 106, respectively.
Antibiotics in the storage medium further reduced contamination from
about 40% to 3%. Microbial contamination was not reduced by
increasing the concentration and immersion times beyond 5 mg/ml PVP-I
for 2 minutes.
CONCLUSION Immersion
of human donor eyes in 5 mg/ml PVP-I solution for 2 minutes
significantly reduces microbial contamination of donor corneas without
relevant penetration of iodine into the corneal layers. Higher PVP-I
concentrations and longer immersion times do not further reduce
contamination, whereas the amount of iodine penetrating the corneal
layers is elevated above the level cytotoxic for corneal fibroblasts.
In view of this, concentrations above 5 mg/ml of PVP-I and immersion
periods over 2 minutes are not recommended for reduction of the
contamination rate of donor eyes.
© 1999 by British Journal of Ophthalmology
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