1. Efficacy and safety of combined UV-light corneal crosslinking and fine-needle diathermy to regress pathological murine corneal (lymph)angiogenesis in vivo.
- Author
-
Hou Y, Zhang W, Le VNH, Deng S, Hadrian K, Mestanoglu M, Musial G, Bock F, and Cursiefen C
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Lymphatic Vessels pathology, Lymphatic Vessels drug effects, Cornea pathology, Cornea drug effects, Photochemotherapy methods, Female, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Combined Modality Therapy, Lymphangiogenesis drug effects, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Angiogenesis, Cross-Linking Reagents, Corneal Neovascularization pathology, Diathermy methods, Photosensitizing Agents therapeutic use, Disease Models, Animal, Ultraviolet Rays, Riboflavin therapeutic use
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare safety and efficacy of isolated and combined UV-light corneal crosslinking (CXL) and fine-needle diathermy (FND) to regress pathological corneal vessels in vivo., Methods: Mice with inflamed and pathologically vascularized corneas received CXL or FND as monotherapy or a combination of both treatments. Corneal pathological blood and lymphatic vessels, immune cells and the morphology of anterior segment structures were evaluated., Results: All three approaches were able to regress blood and lymphatic vessels in mice. A comparative analysis of the three methods revealed that the FND monotherapy and the CXL + FND combination were significantly more effective than the CXL monotherapy, one and 2 weeks after therapy and especially in regressing lymphatic vessels. Furthermore, the combination therapy induced significantly less immune cell recruitment compared to the monotherapies. All three methods were safe to use in regards of corneal integrity., Conclusions: A combination of FND and CXL led to regression of pathological corneal lymphatic and blood vessels and reduced the infiltration of immune cells into inflamed murine corneas. This approach offers a new effective, safe and clinically usable strategy to treat eyes with mature pathological blood vessels and even more so for lymphatic vessels, for example prior to high-risk corneal transplantation., (© 2024 The Authors. Acta Ophthalmologica published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica Foundation.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF