Study reveals untapped potential to increase eye donations needed for sight-restoring surgeries

Study reveals untapped potential to increase eye donations needed for sight-restoring surgeries

Study reveals untapped potential to increase eye donations needed for sight-restoring surgeries

Eye after cornea transplant. Credit: NHS Blood and Transplant

A new study has found there is significant scope to increase the number of eye donations from patients cared for in hospice and palliative care settings—donations which are desperately needed for sight-restoring surgeries.

Researchers from the University of Southampton and clinical partners, including NHS Blood and Transplant, carried out the study. It found just a small fraction of eligible patients in hospice and palliative care settings are being approached to consider the option of eye donation. This is despite both health care professionals and patients having favorable views towards it.

The research is published in the journal Health and Social Care Delivery Research Journal.

The researchers say practice needs to change so that patients who wish to donate are being offered the opportunity as a part of routine end-of-life care.

Demand for eye tissue

Over two million people in the UK are living with sight loss, taking a huge toll on their lives and costing the economy a reported £4.34 billion each year. Some conditions, such as keratoconus and Fuchs corneal dystrophy, can be treated with surgery that removes all or part of a damaged cornea and replaces it with healthy donor tissue (corneal transplant). But there is a shortfall in the supply of donor tissue needed for operations.

NHS Blood and Transplant aims to achieve a weekly stock of 350 eyes for use in surgery or research. But from April 2021 to March 2022, only 88 eyes on average were donated per week.

The RNIB predicts that by 2050, the number of people with sight loss will double to nearly four million (mainly due to the aging population), further increasing the demand for eye tissue. Each donor can help restore or improve the sight of up to 10 people.

Clinical partners across England reviewed the case notes of 1,199 deceased patients in three hospice care and three hospital-based palliative care services. Although 46% of patients were eligible to donate their eyes, less than 4% of potential donors had been approached or referred for eye donation.

Views on donation

To understand attitudes and potential barriers to eye donation, the researchers interviewed over 100 health care professionals and over 60 patients and caregivers receiving palliative care. They also conducted a national survey of 156 service providers.

Dr. Tracy Long-Sutehall, Associate Professor at the University of Southampton and lead author of the research, says, “Many patients and caregivers were not aware of eye donation being an option for themselves or their relative. Those we spoke to generally had positive views about eye donation and were open to being asked about their preferences. This suggests there could be many potential donors in hospice and palliative care settings who are willing to donate their eyes after their death so that others might see.”

Placido disk reflected off eye with keratoconus. Credit: National Keratoconus Foundation

Health care professionals were in favor of eye donation being discussed as part of end-of-life care planning but had gaps in their knowledge around eligibility criteria and processes for referral; more than half had received no formal training regarding eye donation. As such, the majority had never, or hardly ever, initiated a discussion about eye donation with patients or family members.

Dr. Long-Sutehall added, “Conversations around eye donation need to be sensitively managed, so it’s understandable that health care professionals would be reluctant to raise it if they haven’t had suitable training and education.”

Future opportunities

The study demonstrates that there is significant potential for more patients to be given the opportunity to donate their eyes in the future, and for eye donation to be embedded in routine end-of-life care clinical practice.

Emma Winstanley, Lead Nurse for Tissue and Eye Services at NHS Blood and Transplant, who was a co-applicant on the study, says, “This research provides crucial new insight to better understand both patient and health care staff views on eye donation. With more patients dying outside of traditional hospital settings, either at home or in hospices, it is essential that patients have the opportunity to donate whenever donation is possible.

“Eye donation is particularly special as donation can even be possible for patients who have cancer. We know that many patients and families take great comfort and pride from donation. By working closely with hospice colleagues, we can enable more patients to donate and more life-transforming surgeries to take place.”

The researchers highlight several implications for service development, health care practice and recommendations for further research, including the evaluation of a Support Toolkit for Eye donation in Palliative care Settings (STEPS) developed by the research team.

More information:
Tracy Long-Sutehall, Eye Donation from Palliative and Hospice care contexts: investigating Potential, Practice, Preference and Perceptions (EDiPPPP), Health and Social Care Delivery Research Journal (2023). DOI: 10.3310/KJWA6741

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Study reveals untapped potential to increase eye donations needed for sight-restoring surgeries (2023, November 2)
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