|
The Back Page
Seeing the world with new eyes
Biosynthetic corneas restore vision in humans
A new study from researchers in Sweden
and Canada has shown that biosynthetic
corneas can help regenerate and repair
damaged eye tissue and improve vision in
humans. The results, from an early phase
clinical trial with 10 patients, are published
in the 25 August 2010 issue of Science
Translational Medicine.
“This study is important because it is
the first to show that an artificially fabricated
cornea can integrate with the
human eye and stimulate regeneration,”
said senior author Dr May Griffith of Linköping University and the Ottawa
Hospital Research Institute, the
University of Ottawa. “With further
research, this approach could help restore
sight to millions of people who are
waiting for a donated human cornea for
transplantation.”
The cornea is a thin transparent layer of
collagen and cells that acts as a window
into the eyeball. It must be completely
transparent to allow the light to enter and
it also helps with focus. Globally, diseases
that lead to clouding of the cornea represent
the most common cause of blindness.
More than a decade ago, Dr Griffith and
her colleagues began developing biosynthetic
corneas in Ottawa, Canada, using
collagen produced in the laboratory and moulded into the shape of a cornea. After
extensive laboratory testing, Dr Griffith
began collaborating with Professor Per
Fagerholm, an eye surgeon at Linköping University in Sweden to provide the
firstin-
human experience with biosynthetic
cornea implantation.
Together, they initiated a clinical trial
in 10 Swedish patients with advanced keratoconus or central corneal scarring.
Each patient underwent surgery on one
eye to remove damaged corneal tissue and
replace it with the biosynthetic cornea,
made from synthetically cross-linked
recombinant human collagen. Over two
years of follow-up, the researchers
observed that cells and nerves from the
patients’ own corneas had grown into the
implant, resulting in a “regenerated”
cornea that resembled normal, healthy
tissue. Patients did not experience any
rejection reaction or require long-term
immune suppression, which are serious
side effects associated with the use of
human donor tissue. The biosynthetic
corneas also became sensitive to touch
and began producing normal tears to keep
the eye oxygenated. Vision improved in
six of the ten patients, and after contact
lens fitting, vision was comparable to
conventional corneal transplantation
with human donor tissue.
“We are very encouraged by these results
and by the great potential of biosynthetic
corneas,” said Dr Fagerholm. “Further
biomaterial enhancements and modifications
to the surgical technique are ongoing,
and new studies are being planned that will
extend the use of the biosynthetic cornea to a wider range of sight-threatening
conditions
requiring transplantation.”
This research was supported by grants
from the Swedish Research Council and
County of Östergötland, the Canadian
Stem Cell Network and a European
Union Marie Curie International
Fellowship. Initial work in developing the
biosynthetic corneas was supported by the
Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council of Canada and the
Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
Recombinant human collagen type III
used in formulating the biosynthetic
corneas for the clinical study was
provided by US-based FibroGen.

Date
of upload: 25th Sep 2010
|