PCR analysis for assessment of bacterial bioburden in orthokeratology lens cases

Jung Lo, Po Chiung Fang, Chun Chih Chien, Chang Chun Hsiao, Shin Ling Tseng, Yu Hsuan Lai, Ming Tse Kuo*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: To develop a PCR gel analysis method for assessing the bacterial bioburden in orthokeratology contact lens (OK) case fluid determined by culture. Methods: A prospective study with the participation of 41 OK wearers (20 girls, 21 boys) was performed. The mean OK-wearing experience was 3.5±1.9 years. PCR was used to assess the bacterial bioburden (colony-forming units per milliliter) of OK after removal and soaking in the storage case for 6 h. The signal intensity of the PCR bands was ana­lyzed after grayscale image transformation. The difference (cPCR-d) and ratio (cPCR-r) between a PCR signal and its background were used as two standardized indices of PCR signals. The association between the two indices of the PCR signals and the bacterial bioburden determined by culture were analyzed with Pearson’s correlation coefficient (r) and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) plots. Results: At least one microbe was isolated from the OK lens case from 38 of the 41 subjects. Both cPCR-d and cPCR-r showed strong correlations with the bacterial bioburden (r>0.7, p<0.0001). ROC analysis enabled good determination of the cutoff values for the two PCR indices with acceptable sensitivity and specificity (78−89%) to assess the degree of bacterial contamination. Conclusions: The high microbial contamination rate of the OK lens cases revealed the general inappropriate lens care by OK wearers. PCR analysis provides an alternative and rapid method for assessing the bacterial bioburden of OK lens cases, and these results should serve as a warning to OK wearers to follow appropriate lens care procedures to prevent infection.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-8
JournalMolecular Vision
Volume22
StatePublished - 14 01 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Molecular Vision.

Keywords

  • ASSOCIATION
  • CHILDREN
  • CONTAMINATION
  • DAILY-WEAR
  • HONG-KONG
  • OVERNIGHT ORTHOKERATOLOGY
  • PEDIATRIC MICROBIAL KERATITIS
  • RISK-FACTORS
  • SOFT CONTACT-LENSES
  • ULCERATIVE KERATITIS

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