The effect of standard and high-fluence corneal cross-linking (CXL) on cornea and limbus

Abstract

PURPOSE

When treating peripheral ectatic disease-like pellucid marginal degeneration (PMD), corneal cross-linking with UV-A and riboflavin (CXL) must be applied eccentrically to the periphery of the lower cornea, partly irradiating the corneal limbus. Here, we investigated the effect of standard and double-standard fluence corneal cross-linking with riboflavin and UV-A (CXL) on cornea and corneal limbus in the rabbit eye in vivo.

METHODS

Epithelium-off CXL was performed in male New Zealand White rabbits with two irradiation diameters (7 mm central cornea, 13 mm cornea and limbus), using standard fluence (5.4 J/cm(2)) and double-standard fluence (10.8 J/cm(2)) settings. Controls were subjected to epithelial removal and riboflavin instillation, but were not irradiated with UV-A. Following CXL, animals were examined daily until complete closure of the epithelium, and at 7, 14, 21, and 28 days. Animals were killed and a corneoscleral button was excised and processed for light microscopy and immunohistochemistry.

RESULTS

For both irradiation diameters and fluences tested, no signs of endothelial damage or limbal vessel thrombosis were observed, and time to re-epithelialization was similar to untreated controls. Histological and immunohistochemical analysis revealed no differences in the p63 putative stem cell marker expression pattern.

CONCLUSIONS

Even when using fluence twice as high as the one used in current clinical CXL settings, circumferential UV-A irradiation of the corneal limbus does not alter the regenerative capacity of the limbal epithelial cells, and the expression pattern of the putative stem cell marker p63 remains unchanged. This suggests that eccentric CXL may be performed safely in PMD.

+ Authors’ Information

1 Department of Ophthalmology, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland. 2 Hôpital Ophtalmique Jules Gonin, Lausanne, Switzerland. 3 Department of Ophthalmology, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States.

Publié dans

online PUBMED

Référence externe

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25052995

Date de publication

Auteur(s)

O. Richoz, D. Tabibian, A. Hammer, F. Majo, M. Nicolas, F. Hafezi

Auteur au sein du COG

Catégories

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