This has the potential to significantly impact international clinical practice and patient outcomes by providing a cost-effective and long term solution for treating cornea.
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Summary: Corneal disease is a major cause of blindness, affecting more than 10 million people worldwide with millions more suffering from visual impairment. Corneal diseases affect all ages and have a significant impact on vision and quality of life, with obvious economic implications. Current treatment involves corneal transplantation, a surgical procedure where a damaged cornea is replaced by donor corneal tissue. Cadaveric donor tissue is a limited resource in most countries (unavailable in some), with demand increasingly exceeding supply. The current waiting time for corneal transplantation in New Zealand is over one year. Although artificial corneas are available for clinical use, they suffer a number of limitations. Non-biological corneal substitutes (keratoprostheses) do not support cells and therefore increases the risk of post implantation complications such as infection and leakage. Such complications limit long- term visual prognosis. A new biological scaffold has recently been developed that has the potential to overcome these problems and become a clinically viable corneal tissue substitute for human transplantation. This has the potential to significantly impact international clinical practice and patient outcomes by providing a cost-effective and long term solution for treating key corneal diseases. A suitable tissue substitute would have a dramatic effect on reducing waiting times for surgical treatment and may enable treatment of corneal diseases not currently suitable for allograft transplantation, thus decreasing the burden of disease morbidity in the community. Competitive advantage • Current scaffold production is simple and rapid. Has desired lamellar collagen structure, high degree of transparency and tensile strength. • Flexible whilst maintaining desired shape in vivo. • Easily manipulated using surgical forceps without tearing. • Biocompatible and supports cell growth. Current Development stage The technology is at a stage whereby scaffold samples can be easily produced in the lab and used to conduct further experimentation for validation. In vivo animal studies are one avenue for additional technology validation. To date, the scaffold has been shown to have a lamellar structure, shows a high degree of transparency, has significant higher tensile strength (rubber-like consistency) than currently available collagen based scaffolds, and supports cell growth. IP position The collagen compositions and methods of preparing and employing these compositions are novel and have been patented. The compositions and methods are useful for repairing and/or augmenting eye tissue, along with other tissues of the body, and thereby treating and/or preventing various conditions of eye and other bodily conditions. Due to the characteristics of this novel scaffold, it has the potential to be used for various applications other than corneal tissue substitutes. In particular, it is biocompatible (supports cell growth), and has a high tensile strength (enabling it to be sutured). This scaffold therefore has potential applications in engineering tissues such as skin, bone, cartilage or tendon.