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Five exciting developments in eye health research

1 Accu­rate diag­nos­tics with AI

A remark­able piece of eye health research report­ed in Nature Med­i­cine has shown that an arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence (AI) pro­gramme can make the cor­rect refer­ral deci­sion for more than 50 eye dis­eases with 94 per cent accu­ra­cy. This match­es world-lead­ing experts.

The Deep­Mind sys­tem could rev­o­lu­tionise the man­age­ment of eye tests, enabling health­care pro­fes­sion­als to spot con­di­tions ear­li­er and pri­ori­tise patients with the most seri­ous dis­eases before irre­versible dam­age sets in.

Pearse Keane, con­sul­tant oph­thal­mol­o­gist at London’s Moor­fields Eye Hos­pi­tal NHS Foun­da­tion Trust and clin­i­cian sci­en­tist at Uni­ver­si­ty Col­lege Lon­don Insti­tute of Oph­thal­mol­o­gy, says: “The num­ber of eye scans we’re per­form­ing is grow­ing at a pace much faster than human experts are able to inter­pret them. There is a risk this may cause delays in diag­no­sis and treat­ment of sight-threat­en­ing dis­eases, which can be dev­as­tat­ing for patients.

“The AI tech­nol­o­gy we’re devel­op­ing is designed to pri­ori­tise patients who need to be seen and treat­ed urgent­ly by a doc­tor or eye­care pro­fes­sion­al. If we can diag­nose and treat eye con­di­tions ear­ly, it gives us the best chance of sav­ing people’s sight. With fur­ther research it could lead to greater con­sis­ten­cy and qual­i­ty of care for patients with eye prob­lems in the future.”

2 Robot-assist­ed eye surgery

The first eye health research to deter­mine whether robots can per­form eye surgery safe­ly and effec­tive­ly has been acclaimed a suc­cess.

Car­ried out at Oxford’s John Rad­cliffe Hos­pi­tal, the study involved 12 patients. Six received robot-assist­ed surgery and the remain­ing six stan­dard man­u­al surgery to remove a mem­brane from the back of the eye.

Using the robot, the sur­geon was able to per­form the pro­ce­dure as effec­tive­ly or bet­ter than with the tra­di­tion­al man­u­al approach.

In the trial’s sec­ond phase, the team used the robot to insert a fine nee­dle under the reti­na to dis­solve blood in three patients who had age-relat­ed mac­u­lar degen­er­a­tion. All expe­ri­enced an improve­ment in their vision as a result.

Robert MacLaren, Pro­fes­sor of oph­thal­mol­o­gy, says: “This is a huge leap for­ward for del­i­cate and tech­ni­cal­ly dif­fi­cult surgery, which in time should sig­nif­i­cant­ly improve the qual­i­ty and safe­ty of this kind of oper­a­tion.”

The tri­al was con­duct­ed by the Uni­ver­si­ty of Oxford, sup­port­ed by the Nation­al Insti­tute for Health Research Oxford Bio­med­ical Research Cen­tre. Results were pub­lished in Nature Bio­med­ical Engi­neer­ing.

The tri­al builds on ear­li­er pio­neer­ing work at the John Rad­cliffe Hos­pi­tal, which in 2016 car­ried out the world’s first robot­ic eye oper­a­tion.

3 Pain-free, cost-cut­ting laser treat­ment

A sim­ple, safe, pain-free laser treat­ment not only works bet­ter than eye drops at pre­vent­ing glau­co­ma from dete­ri­o­rat­ing, but could also save the NHS tens of mil­lions of pounds a year, accord­ing to eye health research at Moor­fields Eye Hos­pi­tal and UCL Insti­tute of Oph­thal­mol­o­gy.

Gus Gaz­zard, glau­co­ma ser­vice direc­tor at Moor­fields and read­er in glau­co­ma stud­ies at UCL, says: “These results strong­ly sug­gest that laser should be the first treat­ment for glau­co­ma in all new­ly diag­nosed patients.”

The results could poten­tial­ly improve glob­al glau­co­ma treat­ment while sav­ing the NHS up to £1.5 mil­lion a year in treat­ment costs for new­ly diag­nosed patients. If the treat­ment proves to be as effec­tive with pre­vi­ous­ly diag­nosed patients, Moor­fields esti­mates annu­al sav­ings to the NHS could reach up to £250 mil­lion.

Report­ed in The Lancet, the three-year tri­al is the largest ever of its kind. It involved 718 patients, new­ly diag­nosed with glau­co­ma or ocu­lar hyper­ten­sion (high­er than nor­mal pres­sure in the eye).

Patients receiv­ing laser ther­a­py more reg­u­lar­ly achieved the tar­get intraoc­u­lar pres­sure (pres­sure in the eye) than those hav­ing stan­dard eye drops. Laser patients were also less like­ly to need treat­ment for glau­co­ma and cataracts.

4 Gene ther­a­py to fill a ther­a­peu­tic vac­u­um

The first gene ther­a­py for inher­it­ed blind­ness rep­re­sents a poten­tial tri­umph for reti­nal and eye research, but it is gen­er­at­ing exten­sive glob­al con­tro­ver­sy. Recent­ly approved for use in Europe, it had an ini­tial US price tag of $850,000, mak­ing it one of the world’s most expen­sive treat­ments.

Lux­tur­na can restore vision in peo­ple with a rare RPE65 genet­ic muta­tion that caus­es pro­gres­sive vision loss which begins in child­hood. The RPE65 gene pro­vides instruc­tions for mak­ing a pro­tein that is essen­tial for nor­mal vision. Most patients are blind by the time they become young adults. There is no oth­er treat­ment for the dis­ease. Treat­ment con­sists of injec­tions of the RPE65 gene into the reti­na.

An esti­mat­ed 337 peo­ple in the UK have inher­it­ed reti­nal dis­ease. Muta­tions in both copies of the RPE65 gene are esti­mat­ed to affect about one in 200,000 peo­ple.

Dr David Rind, of the US Insti­tute for Clin­i­cal and Eco­nom­ic Review, says: “While the evi­dence is clear the ther­a­py improves vision for patients over sev­er­al years, the long-term dura­tion of this ben­e­fit remains unknown. Assum­ing a ten to twen­ty-year ben­e­fit peri­od, at list price the treat­ment does not meet stan­dard cost-effec­tive­ness thresh­olds.”

5 Bion­ic eye

A five-year study of a bion­ic eye test­ed by five patients with lit­tle or no sight marks a big step for­ward in eye health research, accord­ing to pre­lim­i­nary reports.

But the researchers stress they are a long way from achiev­ing full vision for their research sub­jects. For exam­ple, a patient may be able to see an object with­out know­ing if it is a mug or a base­ball.

William Boss­ing, assis­tant pro­fes­sor of neu­ro­surgery at Bay­lor Col­lege of Med­i­cine, in Hous­ton, Texas, says the research was designed to enhance opti­mal inter­face between the Ori­on bion­ic eye and the brain to enable the research par­tic­i­pants to see forms and shapes.

Sur­gi­cal­ly implant­ed in the brain, the Ori­on includes a cam­era mount­ed on a pair of image-cap­tur­ing eye­glass­es. It deliv­ers pat­terns of stim­u­la­tion direct­ly to the visu­al part of the brain; in oth­er words, it can bypass bro­ken opti­cal nerves.

Daniel Yoshor, Bay­lor pro­fes­sor of neu­ro­surgery, explains: When you think of vision, you think of the eyes, but most of the work is being done in the brain. Impuls­es of light pro­ject­ed on to the reti­na are con­vert­ed into neur­al sig­nals that are trans­mit­ted along the optic nerve to parts of the brain.”