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Dallas Area
Cornea shortages could benefit from national
study showing older Corneas suitable for
transplantation
Newswise — Surgeons and
patients from UT Southwestern Medical Center
and UT Southwestern Transplant Services
Center joined in a landmark study showing
that corneas from older donors are as
successful for transplants after five years
as is tissue from younger donors, allowing
possible expansion of the donor pool.
Based on findings from
the study, the age pool of corneas for
transplant should be expanded to include
donors up to 75 years of age. The study was
funded by the National Eye Institute (NEI),
one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
and published in the April issue of
Ophthalmology.
“The majority of donors
have been older, but there has been a great
prejudice against using older tissue for
fear it was going to wear out faster.
"So
many doctors pass on tissue from older
donors,” said Dr. Dwight
Cavanagh, professor and vice chairman of
ophthalmology at UT Southwestern, which
transplants more than 200 corneas annually.
Dr. Cavanagh served as principal
investigator for the Dallas study.
“The data is very
convincing - in fact, it is ice cold - that
there isn’t a difference between old and
young tissue. What matters is how many cells
are alive in the tissue regardless of the
age of the donor.
"And
there are plenty of people of older age who
have high cell counts,” said Dr. Cavanagh,
medical director for the Transplant Services
Center, which serves as the eye bank for
Dallas-Fort Worth and surrounding areas.
UT Southwestern was one
of 80 sites that participated in the Cornea
Donor Study, which tracked patients over
five years. Included were more than 20
patients from UT Southwestern’s corneal
transplant program.
“The results are
exactly what you’d hope for - that there is
absolutely no difference between a
25-year-old and a 65-year-old in terms of
how long it’s going to last.
"That
means we can use a whole bunch of tissue now
that there was prejudice against using,”
said Dr. Cavanagh, who was among the
researchers who conceived and encouraged
implementation of the study.
Expanded testing for
cornea donors is expected to limit the
number available for transplants, along with
the increasing popularity of laser
surgeries, which often rule out the cornea
for transplants. Donated corneas not used
for transplants are still used in research.
The findings are
particularly important around Dallas-Forth
Worth, which needs more donors, said Ellen
Heck, a study co-author and executive
director of the Transplant Services Center.
The center has to import more than 200
corneas annually from outside the area’s
donor pool to meet local need.
“The reason this is
important to look at is because we’re an
aging population,” Ms. Heck said. “People
are older now at the time of death than they
used to be, so to meet an increasing need
for corneas, we needed to know whether we
can use corneas from older donors.”
The Transplant Services
Center currently accepts corneal tissue from
donors up to age 70 and is reviewing the
results of the study to determine whether it
should expand the age range to 75, she said.
“We don’t want to
exclude potentially usable tissue when there
is a waiting list,” said Ms. Heck, who sits
on the executive committee for the Cornea
Donor Study. “We’re always looking for
donors and we always have people listed for
corneal transplants. We do transplants every
week in this community.”
Locally, the Transplant
Services Center had 642 corneal donors in
2007. Of those, 379, or about 60 percent,
were age 50 or older. The center provides
corneas for the North Texas region’s roughly
15 corneal transplant surgeons on a
first-come, first-served basis.
Nationally, about
33,000 corneal transplants are performed
annually, to replace diseased corneas or
those damaged by trauma.
Cornea transplants have
a high success rate (80 percent to 90
percent) and don’t have the same rejection
issues common to solid organs, such as
livers and hearts. Nor do they require
tissue matching. Donors with vision problems
such as near- or far-sightedness or even
glaucoma are not excluded unless their
corneas are damaged.
Interested donors can
contact the Transplant Services Center at
214-648-2609 or go to
http://www.utsouthwestern.edu.
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