Steroids and Cross-Linking for Ulcer Treatment Trial II: Baseline Characteristics.
Venkatesh N Prajna, Naveen Radhakrishnan, Prajna S Lalitha, Revathi Rajaraman, Josephine Christy, Anitha Venugopal, Sarah Abdelrahman, Amrita Srinivasan, Nicole Varnado, Ben Arnold, Guillermo Amescua, Thomas M Lietman, Jennifer R Rose-Nussbaumer
Summary
While corneal ulceration is an important cause of disability in technologically advanced countries, it occurs more frequently in low and middle-income countries, and the implications on these populations should be considered.
Abstract
PURPOSE
The Steroids and Cross-linking for Ulcer Treatment Trial is an NIH-funded international, randomized, double-masked, sham and placebo-controlled clinical trial to determine the benefit of adjunctive corneal cross-linking with riboflavin and/or topical difluprednate in addition to topical antibiotic drops for treatment of smear-positive bacterial ulcers. The purpose of this study was to explore the baseline characteristics for infection of patients enrolled, and the ocular comorbidities of patients screened for inclusion.
METHODS
Of the 2005 patients with smear-positive bacterial ulcers screened, 280 patients were enrolled. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize and characterize the data.
RESULTS
Eligible patients in India had baseline factors associated with agricultural work (N = 132; 47%) and manual labor (N = 54; 19%), whereas patients in the United States were associated with contact lens wear (N = 11; 69%) ( P <0.001). Nearly, 10% of patients with unilateral infectious keratitis are at risk of bilateral blindness because of preexisting visual disability in their other eye and thus ineligible for inclusion. India had higher rates of exclusionary factors for blindness in the other eye such as cataract (N = 48; 27%) and glaucoma (N = 24; 13) compared with the United States (N = 0; 0%) ( P <0.001).
CONCLUSIONS
While corneal ulceration is an important cause of disability in technologically advanced countries, it occurs more frequently in low and middle-income countries, and the implications on these populations should be considered. These baseline factors can be evaluated to address such health care disparities.
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