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Use of a New Method for the Microbiological Diagnosis of Severe Corneal Infection

Recruiting
Conditions
Microbial Keratitis
Corneal Infection
Infectious Keratitis
Interventions
Biological: PCR multiplex by FilmArray
Registration Number
NCT05888987
Lead Sponsor
CHU de Reims
Brief Summary

Microbial keratitis is a severe and often blindness-inducing pathology which represents today the first reason for long-term hospitalization (more than 5 days) in ophthalmology. Its diagnosis is clinical and leads to an immediate hospitalization in the presence of serious criteria (Mackie classification). The entire process of microbiological diagnosis requires several days before etiological confirmation and therefore delays the initiation of targeted therapy.

Recently, new PCR systems allowing the detection of 18 to 27 pathogens in 75 minutes have been developed. Their use could thus be transposed to ophthalmology by adapting the microbiological diagnostic technique to samples currently taken by swabbing the cornea.

The investigators will compare their diagnosis performance versus conventional methods on patients who suffered for a microbial keratitis with severity criteria.

Detailed Description

46 patients enrolled for severe infectious keratitis will be recruited in the department of Ophthalmology, Robert Debré Hospital, Reims, France. The study will be composed by 2 groups. The first, also called "before group" will contain 23 patients who were anteriorly hospitalized for a severe infectious keratitis in our hospital unit. They received standard microbiological diagnosis methods: Direct microscopic examination with Gram stain, bacterial and fungal cultures, viral and amoebic polymerase chain reaction \[PCR\]).

The second, also called "after group" will enroll patients who suffer for a severe infectious keratitis (prospective group). Each patient will benefit a complete ophthalmologic examination, corneal scrapping and swabbing for standard microbiological diagnosis methods along with another corneal swabbing sample for the use of two different FilmArray® PCR systems identified as "ME" for Meningitis-Encephalitis and "BCID" for Blood Culture Identification.

The investigators hypothesize that the use of rapid multiplex PCR tests for the microbiological diagnosis of severe corneal infections could in the future prove to be more efficient than the current diagnostic strategy, on the one hand, by shortening the time to identify the pathogen and therefore to implement a targeted treatment, and on the other hand, by systematically searching for a large number of pathogens well beyond those targeted today. In addition, the benefits of this technique applied to ophthalmology could improve the long-term visual prognosis, reduce the length of hospitalization and therefore the diagnostic and management costs of these patients.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
46
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
AfterPCR multiplex by FilmArray-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Time to modification of the first line antimicrobial treatment towards a treatment targeting the detected pathogen.At 2 weeks
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Best corrected visual acuityAt 12 months
Descriptive analysis of pathogens responsible for severe infectious keratitis in Champagne-ArdenneAt 1 month
Duration of hospitalizationAt 1 month
Modification of the initial antimicrobial treatment after detection of the etiological agentAt 1 month
• Costs of diagnostic methods (conventional and FilmArray) and management (cost of the average length of stay in ophthalmology at the Reims University Hospital for severe infectious keratitis)At 1 month

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Damien JOLLY

🇫🇷

Reims, France

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