Clinical trials may be five to 10 years off, yet early research results suggest Dimitri Azar may be on the right track to develop a method for sparing patients from complete corneal transplantation when the diseased innermost layer of their cornea threatens their sight. Photos by Graham Ramsay |
Sights set on partial corneal transplantsNew procedures will attempt to replace diseased tissue onlySeptember 15, 2000"We don't have any way of curing these problems," says Nancy Joyce, a Harvard researcher who is working on saving people's sight when their corneas deteriorate. "The only way right now is full corneal transplantation, healthy tissue and all. In our work, we're trying to facilitate replacement of the diseased tissue only." To do that, she's working with colleagues who are generating new cells from old ones. Early results suggest cell transplants may be possible. "We're probably talking somewhere between 5 and 10 years before clinical trials," Joyce said. "We're still in the very early stages." |