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Br J Ophthalmol 2002;86:755-760 doi:10.1136/bjo.86.7.755
  • Original Article
    • Clinical science

Polymerase chain reaction based detection of fungi in infected corneas

  1. P A Gaudio1,*,
  2. U Gopinathan2,
  3. V Sangwan2,
  4. T E Hughes1
  1. 1Yale Eye Center, New Haven, CT, USA
  2. 2LV Prasad Eye Institute, Hyderabad, India
  1. Correspondence to: Thomas E Hughes, PhD, Yale Eye Center, 330 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06520, USA; thomas.hughes{at}yale.edu
  • Accepted 15 February 2002

Abstract

Aims: To evaluate a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based assay to detect fungi in scrapings from infected corneas.

Methods: A PCR assay was developed to amplify a portion of the fungal 18S ribosome gene. Corneal scrapings from 30 patients with presumed infectious keratitis were evaluated using this assay, as well as by standard microbiological techniques, and the results were compared. Conjunctival swabs from each patient's healthy, fellow eye were also evaluated by PCR.

Results: PCR and fungal culture results matched (were both positive or both negative for fungi) in 22 (74%) of 30 scrapings from infected corneas. Three (10%) of 30 samples were PCR positive but fungal culture negative; two of these appeared clinically to represent fungal infections, and the third was clinically indeterminate. Four (13%) scrapings were positive by PCR but also by bacterial and not fungal culture. One specimen (3%) was PCR negative but fungal culture positive. Of the conjunctival swabs from each patient's healthy fellow eye, five (17%) of 30 were positive by PCR, and the opposite, infected eye of all five of these harboured a fungal infection.

Conclusions: PCR is promising as a means to diagnose fungal keratitis and offers some advantages over culture methods, including rapid analysis and the ability to analyse specimens far from where they are collected.

Footnotes

  • * Present address: Francis I Proctor Foundation, San Francisco, CA, USA

  • Funding sources: NEI grant R01EY 08362.

  • The authors have no proprietary interests in this study.

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