Corneal Disease Profile and Transplant Eligibility at a Tertiary Hospital in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

Authors

  • Heavenlight masuki Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences
  • Emanuel Baynity Haydom Lutheran Hospital
  • Suzan Mosenene Department of ophthalmology, school of clinical medicine, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied sciences https://orcid.org/0009-0003-7643-0381
  • Milka Mafwiri Department of Ophthalmology, school of clinical medicine, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.64666/joecsa.2026.14

Keywords:

Corneal diseases, Corneal transplantation, Visual impairment, Traumatic injury

Abstract

Purpose:                                                                                                                                                                                                                        To determine the profile of corneal diseases and assess eligibility for corneal transplantation among patients attending the Eye Department at Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH), Tanzania.

Methods: We conducted a hospital-based descriptive cross-sectional study from July to December 2021, consecutively enrolling all patients with corneal diseases attended the eye department during the study period. Data were collected via interviewer-administered questionnaire. Ocular examinations (including B-scan when indicated) were performed. Transplant eligibility was assessed based on BCVA and lesion characteristics. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 23, and chi-square tests assessed associations between transplant eligibility and sociodemographic characteristics.

Results: A total of 243 participants, contributing 268 affected eyes were recruited and analyzed. Half (50.6%) were aged between 0-20 years. The median age was 20 years (IQR 8–46), and 56% were male. Traumatic corneal injuries (32.5%) and infectious keratitis (29.9%) were the most common diagnoses. Among affected eyes, 52 (19.4%) met criteria for corneal transplantation. The leading indications were advanced infectious keratitis (44.2%) and traumatic perforations (23.1%). Most eligible eyes (71.2%) had severe visual impairment. Optical keratoplasty was indicated in 57.7% and therapeutic in 21% of eyes. Higher education level was significantly associated with transplant eligibility (p = 0.037)

Conclusions: About one in every five patients with corneal disease required corneal transplantation, mostly young individuals with severe visual impairment, primarily due to trauma and advanced infectious keratitis. These findings underscore the urgent need to establish corneal transplant services, promote development of policies to support corneal and eye donation, establish a functional eye bank, and implement preventive strategies against ocular trauma and infection

Author Biographies

Emanuel Baynity, Haydom Lutheran Hospital

Department of ophthalmology, Haydom Lutheran hospital 

Suzan Mosenene, Department of ophthalmology, school of clinical medicine, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied sciences

lecturer, Muhimbili university of health and allied sciences 

Milka Mafwiri, Department of Ophthalmology, school of clinical medicine, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences

Professor, department of ophthalmology, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences 

Downloads

Published

2026-04-29

How to Cite

masuki, H., Baynity, E., Mosenene, S., & Mafwiri, M. (2026). Corneal Disease Profile and Transplant Eligibility at a Tertiary Hospital in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Journal of Ophthalmology of Eastern, Central and Southern Africa (JOECSA), 15(01). https://doi.org/10.64666/joecsa.2026.14

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.