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Topic Name: Implantable Telescope for the Eye: A new device may help restore sight for people with severe macular degeneration
Category: Biomedical
Research persons: Kathryn Colby
Location: Massachusetts, United States
Details
A miniature telescope implanted into the eye could soon help people with
vision loss from end-stage macular degeneration. Last week, an advisory panel
for the Food and Drug Administration unanimously recommended that the agency
approve the implant. Clinical trials of the device, which is about the size of a
pencil eraser, suggest it can improve vision by about three and a half lines on
an eye chart.
"This is one of the few options for people with end-stage macular degeneration,"
says Kathryn Colby, an eye surgeon at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary,
in Boston, who helped develop the surgical procedure used to implant the device.
Macular degeneration is the leading cause of blindness in people age 65 and
older, affecting more than 10 million Americans. The disease strikes the center
of the retina, called the macula, which is especially important for reading,
watching television, and recognizing faces. While some treatments exist to slow
progression of the disease, no treatments are currently available for those in
the latest stages of the disease, who have irreversible damage to the macula. An
estimated 50,000 to 70,000 people per year fall into this category.
The implant, developed by VisionCare Ophthalmic Technologies, a start-up based
in Saratoga, CA, consists of two lenses within a small glass tube. Once inside
the eye, it works like a fixed telephoto lens, acting in conjunction with the
cornea to project a magnified image of whatever the wearer is looking at over a
large part of the retina. Because only the central parts of the retina are
damaged in the disease, magnifying the image on the eye allows the retinal cells
outside the macula to detect the object and send that information to the brain.
(These cells are normally involved in peripheral vision and normally generate
low-resolution visual information compared to the macula cells--you can't read a
sign in your periphery, for example. But magnifying the image also has the
advantage of making it easier for the cells to interpret.)
"This change in vision is significant to patients," says Allen Hill, PCEO of
VisionCare. In addition to improving vision, it "provides the ability to have
normal eye contact, which is a crucial part of social interaction," says Eli
Peli, a scientist at The Schepens Eye Research Institute, who has consulted for
the company.
During the implant procedure, surgeons first remove cataracts from the eye.
(Because both macular degeneration and cataracts are age related, most patients
with end-stage macular degeneration also have cataracts.) They then insert the
telescope, which is held in place by the resident tissue.
The device is implanted in only one eye--patients use this eye for detailed
vision and the untreated eye for peripheral vision. That takes some getting used
to, says Peli. "Instead of using two parts of the same eye, they must switch
between two eyes; if they see someone coming but can't tell who it is, they need
to switch to other eye."
One safety concern associated with the implant is loss of the endothelial cells
that are responsible for keeping the cornea transparent. While cell loss occurs
with any eye surgery, implantation of the telescope requires a larger incision
than typical cataract surgery and thus destroys more endothelial cells. However,
scientists have found that cell loss stabilizes over time. Patients with the
implant lose about 3 percent of their endothelial cells per year, compared to
about 2.5 percent to 3 percent for patients undergoing traditional cataract
surgery. Because endothelial cells do not replicate, substantial loss of these
cells can worsen vision.
The FDA is expected to approve the telescope, as the agency usually follows the
advice of its advisory panels. VisionCare plans to market the device following
FDA approval, estimated for late 2009. The device has already been approved for
use in Europe, though the company plans to launch the product first in the
United States.
| Tags: |
implantable device - macular degeneration - retina - miniature telescope - eye surgeon - - |
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