Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2020)

Hypochlorous acid antiseptic washout improves patient comfort after intravitreal injection: A patient reported outcomes study

  • Anthony Fam,
  • Paul T Finger,
  • Ankit S Tomar,
  • Gaurav Garg,
  • Kimberly J Chin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijo.IJO_2001_20
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. 11
pp. 2439 – 2444

Abstract

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Purpose: Current ocular antiseptic practice for intravitreal injection (IVI) employs 5% povidone–iodine (Betadine®) drops which frequently cause ocular discomfort and prolonged irritation. In an effort to improve comfort while maintaining efficacy, we studied a hypochlorous acid (HOCL 0.01%) spray washout prior to injection. Methods: Patients had received a minimum of 3 IVIs prepared with Betadine®antisepsis prior to entry in this study. Their subsequent IVIs were prepared with Betadine®followed by HOCL 0.01% washout. Facets of comfort were measured by a Likert-scaled questionnaire to compare their experiences after IVI. Results: Thirty-seven participants were enrolled. Addition of HOCL 0.01% spray after Betadine®reduced the duration of discomfort (P = 0.001) and need for artificial tears postinjection (P = 0.003). It improved their reported quality of life (P = 0.04) and sleep (P = 0.01). There were neither HOCL-related side effects nor endophthalmitis during this study. Conclusion: Topical HOCL 0.01% spray after topical Betadine®antisepsis significantly improved patient comfort following IVIs.

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