TY - JOUR
T1 - ENTEROCOCCUS ENDOPHTHALMITIS
T2 - Clinical Settings, Antimicrobial Susceptibility, and Management Outcomes
AU - Dave, Vivek Pravin
AU - Pathengay, Avinash
AU - Braimah, Imoro Zeba
AU - Panchal, Bhavik
AU - Sharma, Savitri
AU - Pappuru, Rajeev Reddy
AU - Mathai, Annie
AU - Tyagi, Mudit
AU - Narayanan, Raja
AU - Jalali, Subhadra
AU - Das, Taraprasad
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © by Ophthalmic Communications Society, Inc.
PY - 2020/5/1
Y1 - 2020/5/1
N2 - Purpose:To report the clinical presentation and management outcome of patients with endophthalmitis caused by Enterococcus species and to report the susceptibility profile of the isolates.Methods:Twenty-nine cases with culture-proven Enterococcus endophthalmitis from January 2005 to May 2018 underwent vitrectomy/vitreous biopsy, intravitreal antibiotic with or without additional procedures. The undiluted vitreous was subjected to microbiologic evaluation. A favorable anatomical outcome was defined as preservation of the globe, absence of hypotony, attached retina, and absence of active inflammation at the last visit. Favorable visual outcome was final visual acuity ≥20/400.Results:There were 24 men (82.8%). Mean age at presentation was 32.89 ± 25.25 years (median 24 years). Inciting event was open globe injury in 18 (62%), endogenous in 5 (17.24%), postcataract surgery in 3 (10.34%), postscleral buckling in 2 (6.89%), and postkeratoplasty in 1 (3.44%). Enterococcus casseliflavus was the commonest species isolated (14/29, 48.27%) followed by E. faecalis (9/29, 31%). Susceptibility to vancomycin was seen in 27/29 isolates (93%). Visual acuity was ≤20/400 in all eyes at presentation and ≥20/400 in 10/29 cases (34.48%) at final visit. Anatomical success was seen in 18/29 eyes (62%). Corneal involvement was high at 24/29 eyes (82.75%).Conclusion:Enterococcus is not an uncommon organism in the setting of endophthalmitis after open globe injury. Resistance to vancomycin is rare. Multidrug resistance pattern is restricted to E. faecalis. Visual outcome is poor despite early and appropriate therapy due to inherent organism virulence.
AB - Purpose:To report the clinical presentation and management outcome of patients with endophthalmitis caused by Enterococcus species and to report the susceptibility profile of the isolates.Methods:Twenty-nine cases with culture-proven Enterococcus endophthalmitis from January 2005 to May 2018 underwent vitrectomy/vitreous biopsy, intravitreal antibiotic with or without additional procedures. The undiluted vitreous was subjected to microbiologic evaluation. A favorable anatomical outcome was defined as preservation of the globe, absence of hypotony, attached retina, and absence of active inflammation at the last visit. Favorable visual outcome was final visual acuity ≥20/400.Results:There were 24 men (82.8%). Mean age at presentation was 32.89 ± 25.25 years (median 24 years). Inciting event was open globe injury in 18 (62%), endogenous in 5 (17.24%), postcataract surgery in 3 (10.34%), postscleral buckling in 2 (6.89%), and postkeratoplasty in 1 (3.44%). Enterococcus casseliflavus was the commonest species isolated (14/29, 48.27%) followed by E. faecalis (9/29, 31%). Susceptibility to vancomycin was seen in 27/29 isolates (93%). Visual acuity was ≤20/400 in all eyes at presentation and ≥20/400 in 10/29 cases (34.48%) at final visit. Anatomical success was seen in 18/29 eyes (62%). Corneal involvement was high at 24/29 eyes (82.75%).Conclusion:Enterococcus is not an uncommon organism in the setting of endophthalmitis after open globe injury. Resistance to vancomycin is rare. Multidrug resistance pattern is restricted to E. faecalis. Visual outcome is poor despite early and appropriate therapy due to inherent organism virulence.
KW - Enterococcus
KW - antibiotic susceptibility
KW - endophthalmitis
KW - management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078626206&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/IAE.0000000000002462
DO - 10.1097/IAE.0000000000002462
M3 - Article
C2 - 30681640
AN - SCOPUS:85078626206
SN - 0275-004X
VL - 40
SP - 898
EP - 902
JO - Retina
JF - Retina
IS - 5
ER -