Objective
To make recommendations for prophylaxis for gonococcal and chlamydial
ophthalmia neonatorum for infants born in Canada. This is an update of
the 1992 Canadian Task Force guideline.
Burden of Suffering
In the absence of preventive measures it is estimated that gonoccocal
ophthalamia neonatorum will develop in approximately 28% of infants born
to women with gonorrhea. Gonoccocal conjunctivitis is usually severe,
and N. gonorrhoeae can penetrate the intact corneal epithelium and
cause microbial keratitis, ulceration and perforation. Since 1981
the rate of reported gonorrhea in Canada (about 230 per 100,000) has been
steadily decreasing: in 1989 there were 19,110 cases (73 cases per 100,00);
8,421 of the cases involved women aged 15 to 59 years old. In 1989
the Laboratory Centre for Disease Control in Ottawa received reports of
55,186 cases of chlamydial infection across Canada (excluding British Columbia
and the Northwest Territories). More than 4 million cases of chlamydial
infection occur each year in the U.S., and 115,000 infants are born to
women with cervical infection. Chlamydial infection can cause pseudomembranous
or membranous conjunctivitis in the newborn that may result in conjunctival
scarring and corneal infiltrates.
Options
Prophylactic options include 1% silver nitrate solution or antibiotic
ointment (1% tetracycline or 0.5% erythromycin) placed in the conjunctival
sac of the newborn soon after birth. Prophylaxis can be routine (legally
required for all infants in specific countries) or done after screening
the mother for gonorrheal and chlamydial infection during prenatal care.
Outcomes
Conjunctivitis, conjunctival scarring, corneal infiltrates, gonococcal
and chlamydial ophthalmia neonatorum, blindness in the infant, side effects
of the treatment, and parent-infant bonding. Costs were mentioned.
Evidence
MEDLINE was searched up to 1991 using the MeSH term ophthalmia neonatorum.
A report with a full reference list was published
in November 1992.
Values
The 13-member Task Force of experts in family medicine, geriatric medicine,
pediatrics, psychiatry and epidemiology used an evidence-based method for
evaluating the effectiveness of preventive health care interventions. Recommendations
were not based on cost-effectiveness of options. Patient preferences were
not discussed.
Background papers providing critical appraisal of the evidence and tentative recommendations prepared by the chapter author were pre-circulated to the members. Evidence for this topic was presented and deliberated upon in 1- to 2-day meetings from March 1990 to September 1990. Consensus was reached on final recommendations.
Benefits, Harms, and Costs
A controlled trial in South Africa showed that introduction of routine
ocular
prophylaxis with silver nitrate or erythromycin ointment reduced general
ophthalmia neonatorum from 273 to 21 per 100,000 live births. A prospective
clinical trial of 12,431 infants showed that three treatments had similar
low rates of infection (0.03% for silver nitrate drops, 0.07% for tetracycline
ointment and 0.1% for erythromycin ointment). Other trials have shown similar
infection rates. Inconsistent and conflicting evidence exists for the costs
and effectiveness of these agents in preventing chlamydial ophthalmia neonatorium.
Adverse effects identified in RCTs include decreased eye openness, inhibited visual responses within the first hour after birth, chemical conjunctivitis, other ocular reactions, and possible decreased parent-infant bonding. Silver nitrate drops had more adverse effects than antibiotic ointments.
Recommendations
Recommendation grade [A, B, C, D, E] and level of evidence
[I, II-1, II-2, II-3, III] are indicated after each recommendation. Citations
in support of individual recommendations are identified in the guideline
text.
Sponsors
The Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health
Care developed this guideline with funding from Health Canada.
Selected References
Source Document
Goldbloom R.B. Prophylaxis for gonococcal and chlamydial ophthalmia
neonatorum. In: Canadian Task Force on the Periodic Health Examination.
Canadian
Guide to Clinical Preventive Health Care. Ottawa: Health Canada,
1994; 168-75.
Other
Canadian Task Force on the Periodic Health Examination: The periodic
health examination, 1992, update: 4. Prophylaxis for gonococcal and chlamydial
ophthalmia neonatorum. Can Med Assoc J. 1992;147:1449-54.