BMJ Open Ophthalmology (Sep 2021)

Viability of preloaded Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty grafts with 96-hour shipment

  • Conan Chen,
  • Steven Jared Solar,
  • John Lohmeier,
  • Staci Terrin,
  • Satya Baliga,
  • Batya Gold Wiener,
  • Daniel Schouten Lewis,
  • Eric Chiang,
  • Kali Alexandra Barnes,
  • Akash Chaurasia,
  • Allen O Eghrari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjophth-2020-000679
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Objective To assess feasibility and compare the effects of 96-hour shipment of Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) grafts as a scroll or a tri-fold on cell viability.Methods and analysis DMEK grafts were prepared at the Rocky Mountain Lions Eye Bank. Twenty pre-stripped DMEK grafts, paired from 10 donors, were either tri-folded in an endothelium-in configuration using microforceps and loaded into a plastic Treyetech cartridge, or suctioned in a scrolled endothelium-out configuration into a modified Jones Tube. Grafts were shipped via FedEx to a secondary location and back for 48 hours each way, resulting in a total shipping time of 96 hours. After shipping, grafts were removed from inserters onto glass slides and unfolded using viscoelastic with endothelium facing upwards. Calcein-AM stained grafts were imaged with a fluorescent microscope and endothelial cell loss (ECL) was measured using trainable segmentation in Fiji by a masked grader.Results A total of 20 grafts were shipped for 96 hours, split between preloaded tri-folded (n=10) and preloaded scrolled (n=10) tissues. No significant difference in ECL was observed across groups after prolonged shipping (14.8% vs 13.7% ECL respectively, p=0.68).Conclusion For preloaded DMEK after 96 hours, both scrolled and tri-folded tissue demonstrated clinically acceptable levels of ECL. The data suggest a wider window of time for endothelial cell viability and is promising for the prospect of international shipment of preloaded grafts.