ABSTRACT
Aim
To review the use of clinical corneal sealants for the closure of full thickness corneal wounds.
Methods
A systematic review was conducted across CENTRAL, Medline, PubMed, Embase, Scopus, mRCT and ICTRP for the keywords of ‘cornea’, ‘full-thickness wound’, ‘sealant’ and their synonyms. Only evidence level 2 of higher as graded by Oxford Centre of Evidence-based Medicine were included for this review.
Results
Seven studies were included; three randomized controlled trials investigated ReSure® sealant, 2 OcuSeal®, 1 human fibrin glue vs cyanoacrylate and 1 human fibrin glue as an adjunct to sutures vs sutures alone in penetrating keratoplasty. ReSure® was superior to suture for sealing leaking corneal incisions after cataract surgery despite provocation. ReSure® sealant has not been tested on complex full thickness corneal wounds, perforated ulcers or penetrating keratoplasty. OcuSeal® was also able to seal full thickness cornea wound post-cataract surgery to prevent ingress of Trypan blue dye. Human fibrin glue and cyanoacrylate were similarly effective in treating corneal perforations <3 mm of mixed etiologies.
Conclusion
There are limited high-level evidence for corneal sealants. The currently available sealants with human data are ReSure®, OcuSeal®, human fibrin glue and cyanoacrylates. While ReSure® and OcuSeal® are effective post-cataract surgery, there are no data for perforations from other etiologies. Post-approval data from ReSure® registry report good tolerability and no apparent safety concerns.
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Acknowledgments
Professors Foster and Watson gratefully acknowledge support from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC project grant APP1067749). Professor Watson is a Sydney Medical School Foundation Fellow.
Declaration of interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest in the preparation of this manuscript.