‘Embodiment awareness’ research aim to help the blind learn math more quickly

Francis Quek, director of the Center for Human Comuter Interaction (HCI) at Virginia Tech, has received a $750,000 grant
from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to study embodiment awareness, mathematics discourse, and the blind.

Quek uses the term “embodiment awareness” to convey the way in which a listener accesses and comprehends communications. This
area of research is grounded in psycholinguistic theories that are based, in part, on the fact that when we speak, our
embodied behavior of gesture, gaze, posture, and facial expression become part of the communicative process.

“Our brain is designed to function within a body,” Quek said. “True communication includes the underlying mental imagery,
which relates to what is said as well as what is displayed.”

Gestures help reveal the major points of accompanying words and help the listener focus on important elements of a
conversation.

The NSF project also focuses on math discourse and education for blind students, who typically lag one-to-three years behind
their sighted fellow students in math, Quek said. Mathematical reasoning is rich in spatial imagery revealed in gestures,
which have the capacity to create images that serve as “objects of contemplation.” When a graphic or illustration is
available for math instruction, the lessons usually include gestures of spatial reference to the graphic.

Research with individuals who are blind suggests that they have remarkable capacity for visual imagery, memory, and
conceptualization and are able to access graphical content through tactile image technology.

However, Quek believes that lack of visual access to the embodiment of the instructor makes mastery of the material more
difficult for blind students. He proposes to remedy this problem by giving blind students the use of tactile devices that can
provide elements of embodiment awareness.

“How do you keep the student in communication with the teacher?” Quek asked. “One thing we can do is to build a series of
devices that will send images to blind students, and make the images into something they can feel.”

He has assembled a multi-disciplinary team that includes Virginia Tech researchers in the fields of computer science,
psychology, education, and disabilities research and services.

The team will perform a series of perception and action experiments to test how well the embodiment devices work. They will
then perform a second series of experiments with blind and sighted students in mathematics instruction, captured on video.
They also will run pre- and post-tests, to assess the quality and quantity of imagistic content and to determine the
correlation, if any, between these and the formation of math concepts.

Quek said the project should have significant direct impact on inclusive mathematics instruction at all grade levels for
visually impaired students. “Providing a sense of embodiment awareness to students who are blind has not yet been studied,”
he said, “and it has the potential for empowering such students.”

Quek also predicts that understanding the channels for embodiment awareness will affect the design of future distance
learning systems, and will provide insights on how best to provide embodiment cues to students in Internet-based instruction.

Contact: Netta Benton
nettavt.edu
540-231-6850
Virginia Tech
vtnews.vt.edu

Cheap Drug – Bevacizumab (Avastin) For Bowel Cancer – Effective For Sight Loss In Elderly People

Bevacizumab (Avastin), a bowel cancer medication which is widely used off label to prevent AMD (wet age related macular degeneration), has been shown to be safe and effective – it is a much cheaper alternative to approved drug ranibizumab (Lucentis). Several large trials comparing the two medications are currently ongoing.

Ranibizumab was not included in this study (it was not licensed for use when the trial began), results of which have been published in the BMJ (British Medical Journal). The researchers support bevacizumab’s immediate implementation in healthcare systems whose limited budgets prevent patients’ access to ranibizumab.

In most countries worldwide, where there is either no treatment or inferior therapies for wet AMD patients, the appropriate use of highly cost-effective bevacizumab would have an direct impact in reducing incident blindness from this condition, the authors write.

Wet AMD is the leading cause of visual loss/virtual blindness in people aged over 50 years in Europe and North America. Visual loss results from the progressive loss of light sensitive cells at the back of the eye caused by damage from abnormal, leaking blood vessels. Sufferers do not go blind, but find it practically impossible to read, drive, or undertake tasks that require fine, sharp, central vision.

In 2006, scientists at three UK eye centers decided to determine whether bevacizumab is an effective and safe treatment for wet AMD compared to standard NHS (National Health Service) care available at the time.

131 trial participants, all aged 50 years or more and who had wet AMD were selected randomly to either receive bevacizumab injections at six week intervals or standard care (one of 3 different treatments available on the NHS at the start of the study). Visual acuity was measured at the start of the study (baseline) and then monitored over one year (54 weeks).

At one year:

32% of patients in the bevacizumab group gained 15 or more letters from baseline visual acuity
3% in the standard care group gained 15 or more letters from baseline visual acuity
91% of those receiving bevacizumab treatment lost fewer than 15 letters of visual acuity from baseline
67% in the standard care group lost fewer than 15 letters of visual acuity from baseline

Average visual acuity rose by 7 letters in the bevacizumab group with a median of seven injections, compared to a fall of 9.7 letters in the standard care group, and the initial improvement at week 18 was sustained to week 54.

There was a low rate of serious adverse events associated with Bevacizumab treatment.

The researchers wrote that the results demonstrate that bevacizumab injections given at six weekly intervals for wet AMD are superior to the standard care available at the start of the trial.

The authors concluded:

This trial provides level-one evidence for the use of bevacizumab injections for the treatment of wet AMD, they conclude.

Professor Usha Chakravarthy from the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast, in an accompanying editorial writes that, although this trial fills a gap in the evidence base and shows compellingly that bevacizumab is superior to previously employed treatments, it does not tell us whether the drug is as effective as ranibizumab. And she warns that:

..the off label use of bevacizumab should not be encouraged until the large randomized trials comparing it with ranibizumab report their findings.

Research
Bevacizumab for neovascular age related macular degeneration (ABC Trial): multicentre randomised double masked study
Adnan Tufail, Praveen J Patel, Catherine Egan, Philip Hykin, Lyndon da Cruz, Zdenek Gregor, Jonathan Dowler, Mohammed A Majid, Clare Bailey, Quresh Mohamed, Robert Johnston, Catey Bunce, Wen Xing
Published 10 June 2010, doi:10.1136/bmj.c2459
BMJ 2010;340:c2459

Editorials
Bevacizumab for the treatment of neovascular age related macular degeneration
Usha Chakravarthy
Published 10 June 2010, doi:10.1136/bmj.c2834
BMJ 2010;340:c2834

View drug information on Avastin; Lucentis.

Cataract Treatment Gets More Precise With FDA Approval Of Softec HDTM Lens

Lenstec, Inc. — a manufacturer of technologically-advanced implantable lenses — today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the company’s Softec HD™ Intraocular Lens Implant (IOL) for treating patients with cataracts.
The newly approved Softec HD is part of Lenstec’s “Precision Series” of implantable IOLs that enable ophthalmologists to achieve previously unattainable predictability and precision in vision surgery.

Targeting a Growing Problem Worldwide

Cataract formation is among the leading causes of blindness. While not generally amenable to prevention, cataracts can usually be treated with surgery in which an IOL is used to replace the damaged natural crystalline lens. According to the World Health Organization, the number of cataract operations internationally will grow to 20 million this year, up from seven million in 2000.
The Softec HD is already in widespread use throughout the European Union, Australia, Canada, China and other international markets. More than one million Softec IOLs have been implanted worldwide since 2005.

With today’s approval announcement, cataract patients in the U.S. can now benefit from Softec HD’s advanced technology, which will be on display April 9-14 at the ASCRS (American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons) Symposium & Congress in Boston (Booth # 2272).

Unrivaled Predictability

Based on Lenstec’s proprietary lens manufacturing technology, the Softec HD is designed to make cataract surgery more predictable by reducing the variability inherent in any manufactured lens. When it comes to lenses used for vision correction, variability is defined as the tolerance or margin of error measured by the difference between a lens’ labeled prescription and its actual power.
The Softec HD is manufactured with a tolerance of just 0.125D (diopters), which is up to three times more precise than cataract replacement lenses manufactured under less stringent ISO standards.

“Lens variability is one of the leading causes of refractive error for patients who undergo cataract surgery,” said Lenstec Vice President Jim Simms. “Our ‘Precision Series’ technology reduces such variability and enables surgeons to better target each patient’s prescription.”

William F. Maloney, M.D., associate clinical professor of ophthalmology at the University of California, Irvine, has cautioned surgeons for years about the problems associated with lens variability.

“The accuracy of the IOL prescription label is now likely to be the greatest source of refractive error in your surgery,” Dr. Maloney warned in the September 2005 issue of Ocular Surgery News. “When it comes to power, what you see is definitely not what you get. The tolerance for error in most IOL labeling is now obsolete, and it too fails today’s refractive accuracy test. Until that changes, your efforts at refractive recalibration will be hostage to this outdated industry standard.”

Simms added, “The only way to reduce such variability is to manufacture a more precise lens. While this requires more effort, we have been able to make the process scalable in a way that larger implantable lens manufacturers with legacy systems simply can’t match.”

Unrivaled Precision

In addition to reducing variability, Lenstec’s high-precision manufacturing process makes it possible to produce Softec HD lenses in 0.25D increments for prescriptions from +18D to +25D. In contrast, standard IOLs from other manufacturers are available only in 0.5D increments, which means they can be up to 0.25D out of step with a patient’s lens prescription.

“Today’s announced approval of the Softec HD means that U.S. surgeons now have the technology to address concerns about lens variability head-on and provide cataract patients with a new, vastly superior level of predictability and precision,” Simms concluded.

Cataract formation is a vision disorder characterized by cloudy or opaque areas in the eye’s natural lens that usually develop gradually with advancing age (environmental factors, metabolic diseases and certain medications can also accelerate cataract formation).

Source
Lenstec

Weakening Economy Prompts Advanced Medical Optics To Lower 2008 Revenue Guidance

Advanced Medical Optics, Inc. (AMO) (NYSE:EYE) today lowered 2008 revenue guidance to a range of $1.17 billion to $1.20 billion and 2008 adjusted earnings-per-share (EPS) guidance to a range of $0.70 to $0.80. The company had previously forecasted a 2008 revenue range of $1.22 billion to $1.24 billion and a 2008 adjusted EPS range of $1.00 to $1.15.

“The change in guidance reflects our view that deteriorating economic conditions are impacting our U.S. and European refractive procedure and system sales more significantly than we had previously anticipated,” said Jim Mazzo, AMO chairman and chief executive officer. “In addition, our revised guidance reflects slower-than-expected eye care sales for the balance of 2008.”

Compared to the same period one year ago, AMO’s third-quarter 2008 domestic excimer laser procedures declined about 37% and its domestic femtosecond procedures declined about 12%. Based on AMO’s view that U.S. economic conditions will continue to weaken, the company now expects domestic excimer and femtosecond procedures to decline further in the fourth quarter. The company had previously expected its fourth-quarter U.S. excimer procedures to decline in the high 30% range and its U.S. femtosecond procedures to grow.

“International expansion of our refractive business is an important AMO strategy and we continue to forecast double-digit revenue growth from international markets in 2008,” Mazzo said. “Our business remains strong in Japan and Asia Pacific. However, we began to experience more significant excimer and femtosecond procedure weakness in Europe during the third quarter as economic conditions worsened there. Our third-quarter refractive system sales were below expectations on a global basis and we expect this trend to continue in the fourth quarter, as well.

“We also believe the soft economy is contributing to lower-than-expected eye care sales as consumers curtail spending and retailers reduce inventory levels. In addition, while our recent multipurpose market share trends are positive, eye care sales in Japan remain below our expectations and we are making management and operational changes to improve our performance in future periods.

“Our cataract business, which is our largest and not generally economically sensitive, has continued to achieve strong growth in all geographies versus year-ago levels. We attribute this to increased demand for our flagship cataract products, including the Tecnis® intraocular lens, White Star Signature™ phacoemulsification system and Healon® family of viscoelastics.”

AMO will release its third-quarter results before the market opens on Friday, October 31. It provided the following preliminary view of the quarter:

– Sales of approximately $275 million, up slightly versus the same period last year. Third-quarter 2008 sales mix of approximately 47%, 35% and 18% representing cataract, refractive and eye care sales, respectively.

– SG&A expense down significantly, compared to both the second quarter of 2008 and the year-ago quarter.

– Total debt of $1.54 billion, representing favorable cash flows during the quarter that allowed the company to pay down the outstanding balance on its revolver credit facility.

“We are in the midst of a very dynamic and challenging business environment and the AMO management team is fully focused on mitigating the downside risk while maximizing our long-term competitive strength,” Mazzo continued. “This includes building on the positive momentum in our cataract business on a global basis, allocating resources within our refractive business to extend our technological and market leadership, and taking proactive steps to spur eye care sales growth and market share gains. Moreover, we remain vigilant in our effort to enhance efficiency and lower costs, while improving cash flows in order to reduce debt and strengthen our balance sheet.”

Today’s Live Web Cast & Audio Replay

AMO will host a live web cast today at 10:00 a.m. EDT to discuss its 2008 outlook. To listen, visit amo-inc. An audio replay will be available at approximately noon EDT today and will continue through midnight on Thursday, October 16, at 888-203-1112 (Passcode 3209948) or by visiting amo-inc .

About Advanced Medical Optics (AMO)

AMO is focused on providing the full range of advanced refractive technologies and support to help eye care professionals deliver optimal vision and lifestyle experiences to patients of all ages. Products in the cataract line include monofocal intraocular lenses (IOLs), phacoemulsification systems, viscoelastics, and related products used in ocular surgery. AMO owns or has the rights to such product brands as Tecnis®, Clariflex® and Sensar® IOLs; Sovereign®, Sovereign® Compact and WhiteStar Signature™ phacoemulsification systems with WhiteStar® technology; Healon® viscoelastics and the Baerveldt® glaucoma shunt. Products in the refractive line include wavefront diagnostic devices, femtosecond lasers and associated patient interface devices; excimer laser vision correction systems and treatment cards, and refractive implants. AMO brands in the refractive business include iDesign™, iFS™, Star S4 IR®, WaveScan Wavefront®, Advanced CustomVue™, IntraLase®, IntraLasik® and ReZoom®, Tecnis® Multifocal and Verisyse® IOLs. Products in the eye care line include disinfecting solutions, enzymatic cleaners, lens rewetting drops and artificial tears. Among the eye care product brands the company possesses are COMPLETE®, COMPLETE® Blink-N-Clean®, Consept®F, Consept® 1 Step, Oxysept® 1 Step, UltraCare®, Ultrazyme®, Total Care™ and blink® branded products. AMO is based in Santa Ana, California, and employs approximately 4,000 worldwide. The company has operations in 30 countries and markets products in approximately 60 countries. For more information, visit the company’s Website at amo-inc.

Use of Non-GAAP Measures

Our EPS guidance for 2008 is provided on a non-GAAP basis. The company’s adjusted EPS guidance excludes any charges associated with acquisitions, restructurings, reorganizations and recapitalizations and other special charges or gains. The guidance also assumes no impact of potential unrealized gains or losses on derivative instruments. The company believes this presentation is useful to investors to conduct a more meaningful, consistent comparison of the company’s on-going operating results. This presentation is also consistent with our internal use of the measure, which we use to measure the profitability of on-going operating results against prior periods and against our internally developed targets. We believe that our investors also use this measure to analyze the sustainable profitability of the on-going business operations. The economic substance related to our use of adjusted per-share guidance is our belief that the appropriate analysis of our profitability cannot be effectively considered while incorporating the effect of unusual items and charges that have not been experienced in prior periods. The company is not able to provide a reconciliation of projected adjusted per-share guidance to expected reported results due to the unknown effect, timing and potential significance of special charges or gains, and our inability to forecast charges associated with future transactions and initiatives.

These non-GAAP financial measures are used in addition to and in conjunction with results presented in accordance with GAAP. These non-GAAP financial measures reflect an additional way of viewing aspects of our operations that, when viewed with our GAAP results, provide a more complete understanding of factors and trends affecting our business. These non-GAAP measures should be considered as a supplement to, and not as a substitute for, or superior to, the corresponding measures calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forecasts about AMO and its businesses, such as management’s sales and adjusted earnings per-share outlook. Because forecasts are inherently estimates that cannot be made with precision, the company’s performance may differ from its estimates and targets. This press release also includes third-quarter 2008 estimated results, which remain preliminary pending the completion of AMO’s fiscal closing process and related quarterly review by its outside auditors.

Statements in this press release regarding financial guidance and forecasts, statements by Mr. Mazzo and any other statements in this press release that refer to AMO’s estimated or anticipated future results, are forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements in this press release reflect AMO’s current analysis of existing trends and information and represent AMO’s estimates and judgment only as of the date of this press release. Actual results may differ from current expectations based on a number of factors affecting AMO’s businesses including but not limited to adjustments made pursuant to the third quarter review by its outside auditors, the impact of the U.S. and European economic downturn; unexpected delays or costs associated with restructuring activities; uncertainties associated with successful market share recovery in the multi-purpose solution segment and impacts of our previous eye care recalls; unexpected changes in competitive, regulatory and market conditions; the potential for delays in the launching of new products; the performance of new products and the continued acceptance of current products; growth of our market share position in each business unit; our ability to lower costs and improve cash flows; the execution of strategic initiatives; AMO’s ability to maintain a sufficient supply of products and unexpected supply delays as it consolidates operations; product liability claims or new quality issues; litigation related to our recall or otherwise; and the uncertainties associated with intellectual property protection for the company’s products and exposure to claims of intellectual property infringement by others. In addition, matters generally affecting the domestic and global economy, such as changes in interest and currency exchange rates or consumer confidence indices, can affect AMO’s results. Therefore, the reader is cautioned not to rely on these forward-looking statements. AMO disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

Additional information concerning these and other risk factors may be found in previous financial press releases issued by AMO. AMO’s public periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the discussion under the heading “Risk Factors” in AMO’s 2007 Form 10-K filed in March 2008 that include information concerning these and other risk factors. Copies of press releases and additional information about AMO are available at amo-inc, or by contacting AMO’s Investor Relations Department by calling 714-247-8455.

AMO

Blind Mice Can ‘See’ Thanks To Special Retinal Cells

It would make the perfect question for the popular television show “Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader:” What parts of the eye allow us to see?

The conventional wisdom: rods and cones. The human retina contains about 120 million rods, which detect light and darkness, shape and movement, and about 7 million cones, which in addition detect color. Without them, or so we are taught, our eyesight simply would not exist.

But that might not be true, according to a study — published July 15 in the journal Neuron — that provides new hope to people who have severe vision impairments or who are blind.

A team led by biologist Samer Hattar of The Johns Hopkins University’s Krieger School of Arts and Sciences found that mice that didn’t have any rods and cones function could still see — and not just light, but also patterns and images — courtesy of special photosensitive cells in the rodents’ retinas. Until now, it was presumed that those cells, called intrinsically photosensitive Retinal Ganglion Cells, (or ipRGCs), didn’t play a role in image formation, but instead served other functions, such as dictating when the animals went to sleep or woke up. (All mammals, including humans, have ipRGCs, as well as rods and cones.)

“Up until now, it was assumed that rods and cones were the only cells capable of detecting light to allow us to form images,” said Hattar, who as an assistant professor in the Department of Biology, studies mammals’ sleep-wake cycles, also called “circadian rhythms.” “But our study shows that even mice which were blind could form low-acuity yet measurable images, using ipRGCs. The exciting thing is that, in theory at least, this means that a blind person could be trained to use his or her ipRGCs to perform simple tasks that require low visual acuity.”

“Visual acuity” refers to the sharpness or clarity of a person’s (or animal’s) vision. Someone with so-called “20/20 vision” can see clearly at a distance of 20 feet what the “average” human being can see at that distance. In contrast, a person with “20/100” vision would have to stand 20 feet away from, for instance, an eye chart that the average person could read from 100 feet away. People with very low visual acuity (worse than “20/100” with corrective lenses) are considered “legally blind.”

In addition to providing hope for people with serious vision problems, Hattar’s findings hint that, in the past, mammals may have used their ipRGCs for sight/image formation, but during the course of evolution, that function was somehow taken over by rods and cones.

The study also concludes that, far from being homogenous, ipRGCs come in five different subtypes, with the possibility that each may have different light-detecting physiological functions.

To conduct the study, the team used a special system to genetically label cells and then “trace” them to the rodents’ brains before subjecting the mice to a number of vision tests. In one, mice followed the movements of a rotating drum, a test that assessed the animals’ ability to track moving objects. In another, the rodents were placed within a “Y”-shaped maze and challenged to escape by selecting the lever that would let them out. That lever was associated with a certain visual pattern. The mice that were blind — they lacked rods, cones and ipRGCs — couldn’t find that lever. But those with only ipRGCs could.

“These studies are extremely exciting to me, because they show that even a simple light-detecting system like ipRGCs has incredible diversity and may support low-acuity vision, allowing us to peer into evolution to understand how simple vision may have originally evolved before the introduction of the fancy photoreceptors rods and cones,” Hattar said.

Hattar’s team worked on this study in collaboration with groups led by David Berson of Brown University and Glen Prusky of Weill Cornell Medical College. It was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

Source:
Lisa DeNike
Johns Hopkins University

News From The Journal Of Clinical Investigation, July 24, 2008

TRANSPLANTATION: How to identify liver transplant recipients who no longer need drugs

A very small number of individuals who have had a liver transplant are able to stop taking drugs that prevent the immune system from attacking their transplanted liver (immunosuppressants). These people are said to be tolerant of their new liver, and becoming independent of immunosuppressants revolutionizes their life, as long-term use of immunosuppressants has serious side-effects. The problem is, there is no diagnostic test to identify these people. However, Alberto S??nchez-Fueyo and colleagues, at Hospital Cl?�nic Barcelona, Spain, have now made a step toward this goal by identifying several gene signatures that distinguish tolerant liver transplant recipients from those that are not tolerant. Importantly, these gene signatures could be detected by analyzing the peripheral blood and did not require an invasive procedure. Vicki Seyfert-Margolis and Laurence Turka discuss the immense clinical importance of this study in an accompanying commentary.

TITLE: Using transcriptional profiling to develop a diagnostic test of operational tolerance in liver transplant recipients

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Alberto S??nchez-Fueyo
Hospital Cl?�nic Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=35342

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY

TITLE: Marking a path to transplant tolerance

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Vicki Seyfert-Margolis
Immune Tolerance Network, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=36552

CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE: Early warning system: a new way to detect the cause of heart attack

One of the most common causes of heart attacks (also known as myocardial infarctions) and stroke is atherosclerosis, a disease of the major arterial blood vessels. Heart attacks and stroke occur when atherosclerotic plaques in the wall of an artery (which are what gives the disease its alternative name of hardening of the arteries) rupture, clogging up the blood supply to the heart or brain, respectively. A new, noninvasive way to detect the presence of ruptured atherosclerotic plaques has been developed by Kitty Cleutjens and colleagues, at the University of Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Specifically, it was shown that the blood of individuals with ruptured atherosclerotic plaques (as evidenced by hospitalization for an acute heart attack) contained antibodies reactive against two newly identified peptides, E1 and E12. The presence of these antibodies was detected extremely early after the onset of symptoms of a heart attack and so the authors hope that this approach might one day be used to improve early detection of ruptured atherosclerotic plaques such that individuals can get more timely treatment. However, as they note, further studies on additional patients are needed before this work can be translated into the clinic, and this sentiment is echoed, in an accompanying commentary, by Robert Gerszten and colleagues, at Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown.

TITLE: Noninvasive diagnosis of ruptured peripheral atherosclerotic lesions and myocardial infarction by antibody profiling

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Kitty B.J.M. Cleutjens
University of Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=32767

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY

TITLE: Novel antibody markers of unstable atherosclerotic lesions

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Robert E. Gerszten
Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, Massachusetts, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=36270

HEMATOLOGY: Solving problems with platelets

Individuals with very few platelets (the blood cells that regulate blood clot formation) are said to suffer from thrombocytopenia. There are many causes of thrombocytopenia, including increased destruction of platelets. New data, generated by two independent groups, have provided clinically relevant insight into two forms of thrombocytopenia caused by increased platelet destruction – immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) and fetomaternal alloimmune thrombocytopenia (FMAIT). The importance of these studies for the development of new therapeutics is discussed in an accompany commentary by Bethan Psaila and James Bussel, at Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, New York.

In the first study, Masataka Kuwana and colleagues, at Keio University School of Medicine, Japan, set out to understand why platelet numbers return to nearly normal levels in about 50% of individuals with ITP who are also infected with the bacterium Helicobacter pylori after they have been treated with antibiotics to clear their H. pylori infection. It was found that immune cells known as monocytes (which are involved in the destruction of platelets through their ability to take up and degrade antibody coated platelets via activating Fc receptors) exhibited characteristics of activated cells before the H. pylori infection was eradicated. This included high levels of activating Fc-gamma receptors and low levels of an inhibitory Fc-gamma receptor. Upon H. pylori eradication levels of the activating Fc-gamma receptors decreased and levels of the inhibitory receptor increased. The authors therefore conclude that H. pylori eradication dampens the activation status of monocytes such that their Fc-gamma repertoire favors uptake and destruction of platelets and that this is reversed upon H. pylori eradication.

In the second study, Cedric Ghevaert and colleagues, at NHS Blood and Transplant, United Kingdom, developed an approach to manipulate the interaction between antibody coated platelets and activating Fc-gamma receptors to decrease monocyte uptake and destruction of platelets. In FMAIT, mothers generate antibodies that bind to a molecule (HPA-1a) on the platelets of their fetus such that they are taken up by monocytes and destroyed. The authors developed a molecule that binds HPA-1a in place of the mother’s antibodies when analyzed in vitro. Further in vitro and mouse studies indicated that this molecule dramatically decreased platelet destruction, leading to the suggestion that this approach be evaluated in human clinical studies.

TITLE: Helicobacter pylori eradication shifts monocyte Fc-gamma receptor balance toward inhibitory Fc-gamma-RIIB in immune thrombocytopenic purpura patients

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Masataka Kuwana
Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=34496

RELATED MANUSCRIPT

TITLE: Developing recombinant HPA-1a-specific antibodies with abrogated Fc-gamma receptor binding for the treatment of fetomaternal alloimmune thrombocytopenia

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Cedric Ghevaert
NHS Blood and Transplant, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=34708

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY

TITLE: Fc receptors in immune thrombocytopenias: a target for immunomodulation?

AUTHOR CONTACT:
James B. Bussel
Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=36451

OPHTHALMOLOGY: How to PROM(1)ote vision

Age-related macular degeneration is the leading cause of central vision loss in Americans over the age of 65. Inherited forms of macular degeneration are far less common, but, as noted in a commentary by Mark Kleinman and Jayakrishna Ambati, at the University of Kentucky, Lexington, defining the genes mutated in individuals with these forms of the disease has led to numerous discoveries regarding the molecular bases of vision. This has again proven true in work performed by a team of researchers, at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and the University of California, at Los Angeles, that has determined why a genetic mutation that leads to the generation of a mutant form of the protein PROM1 causes macular degeneration.

In the study, the same mutant form of PROM1 was identified in individuals with three different forms of inherited macular degeneration. When mice were engineered to express this mutant form of human PROM1 it was observed that cells in the eye crucial for vision (rod photoreceptors) underwent progressive degeneration. Further, the part of the rod photoreceptors known as the outer segment, which is made of a series of discrete membranous disks and is the light-sensing part of the cell, was greatly overgrown and misoriented. These data indicate that PROM1 seems to direct the organization of rod photoreceptor outer segment disks, providing important insight into the mechanisms underlying vision.

TITLE: Mutant prominin 1 found in patients with macular degeneration disrupts photoreceptor disk morphogenesis in mice

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Zhenglin Yang
University of California, at San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.

Kang Zhang
University of California, at San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.

David S. Williams
University of California, at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=35891

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY

TITLE: Fifty years later: the disk goes to the prom

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Jayakrishna Ambati
University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=36515

METABOLISM: Improving the efficacy of enzyme replacement therapies

Mucopolysaccharidoses (MPSs) are a family of genetic diseases caused by deficiency in any one of a number of proteins known as enzymes. The tissues of individuals with MPSs accumulate high levels of molecules known as GAGs, ultimately resulting in premature death. Certain tissues are resistant to administration of the deficient enzyme (enzyme replacement therapy [ERT]), possibly due, in part, to the body’s immune response to the replaced enzyme. In a new study, a team of researchers, at the University of California, Los Angeles, the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, used dogs with a disease similar to MPS I to demonstrate that treatments that make the immune system tolerate the replaced enzyme (i.e., make the immune system think that the replaced enzyme is a normal part of the body that should not be attacked) improves the effectiveness of ERT.

Dogs with a disease similar to MPS I that had not been “tolerized” to the missing enzyme developed antibodies against the replacement enzyme and showed a less favorable response to ERT than the tolerized dogs, where ERT reduced GAG accumulation. The authors conclude that inducing immune tolerance to replacement enzymes could improve the success of ERT for MPS I as well as other MPSs in humans. In an accompanying commentary, Katherine Ponder of Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, agrees with this conclusion and further suggests that similar immune tolerance or immunosuppressive treatments are likely to become standard practice for treating individuals with MPSs or related disorders.

TITLE: Immune tolerance improves the efficacy of enzyme replacement therapy in canine mucopolysaccharidosis I

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Emil D. Kakkis
BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, California, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=34676

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY

TITLE: Immune response hinders therapy for lysosomal storage diseases

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Katherine P. Ponder
Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=36521

METABOLIC DISEASE: The protein FSP27 helps bulk up white fat

White fat cells (adipocytes) contain a large droplet of fat-soluble molecules (lipids) that acts as an energy store that can be built up or used as necessary, to balance energy intake and expenditure. Obesity, which occurs when an individual’s energy intake is greater than their expenditure, is associated with complications such as type 2 diabetes, and it is hoped that understanding the mechanism(s) by which these lipid droplets form and are maintained might provide clues about how obesity leads to such severe consequences. And now, Masato Kasuga and his colleagues, at Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan, have revealed a link between lipid accumulation in white adipocytes, energy balance, and a characteristic of type 2 diabetes, resistance to the effects of the hormone insulin.

In the study, the protein FSP27 was found to be localized to lipid droplets in mouse white adipocytes and to enhance the formation of white adipocytes from precursor cells. Mice deficient in FSP27 were protected from obesity and insulin resistance, and had an increased metabolic rate (i.e., they burnt more energy). FSP27 depletion in cultured mouse white adipocytes resulted in the breakdown of lipids, whereas FSP27 overexpression promoted lipid droplet formation. The authors therefore conclude that FSP27 promotes the formation of lipid droplets in white adipocytes and thereby has a crucial role in trying to control the energy imbalance that arises in obesity. The importance of these data and the next steps forward are discussed in an accompanying commentary, by Vishwajeet Puri and Michael Czech, at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester.

TITLE: FSP27 contributes to efficient energy storage in murine white adipocytes by promoting the formation of unilocular lipid droplets

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Masato Kasuga
Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine, Kobe, Japan

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=34090

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY

TITLE: Lipid droplets: FSP27 knockout enhances their sizzle

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Michael P. Czech
University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA.

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci/article.php?id=36554

Source: Karen Honey

Journal of Clinical Investigation

Study Shows New-Generation Silicone Hydrogel Contact Lenses Can Alleviate Some Common Problems Of Soft Contact Lens Wear

While nearly 88 percent of all computer users will develop Computer Vision Syndrome at some time in their lives according to the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, a new nationwide study of Americans’ attitudes and experiences with vision care reveals that contact lens wearers are more likely than non-wearers to experience at least one of the symptoms often associated with the disorder. Now, new research demonstrates that the use of new-generation silicone-hydrogel lenses (senofilcon-A) can alleviate some of these problems.

Nearly half (45 percent) of computer users report they at least sometimes experience dry or tired eyes during or after using a computer, but contact lens wearers are significantly more likely than non-wearers (57 percent vs. 43 percent) to describe these symptoms. Furthermore, one-third of contact lens wearers (36 percent) polled say they experience contact lens discomfort while working at a computer according to findings from Americans’ Attitudes and Perceptions About Vision Care, a nationwide survey of more than 3,700 adults conducted by Harris Interactive® on behalf of The Vision Care Institute™ of Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc.

“The unique characteristics and high visual demands of computer work make many individuals, particularly contact lens wearers, susceptible to the development of eye and vision-related problems,” explains Dr. Jeffrey Anshel, a practicing optometrist and author of Visual Ergonomics in the Workplace. “Research shows that while using a computer, we blink about three times less than normally. These long non-blinking phases can cause the surface of most contact lenses to dry out, which can lead to extreme discomfort and a loss of visual clarity.”

A study published in the current issue of Eye & Contact Lens, the peer reviewed journal of the Contact Lens Association of Ophthalmologists, demonstrates that contact lenses made with senofilcon A, a new-generation silicone hydrogel material in ACUVUE OASYS® Brand Contact Lenses with HYDRACLEAR™ Plus, can alleviate some of the common problems of soft contact lens wear.

About the Study

At the outset of the study, researchers evaluated clinical data from 1,092 current soft contact lens wearers to calculate the prevalence of six common signs and symptoms associated with contact lens discomfort. Criteria included patient reports of frequent or constant discomfort or dryness, and at least two hours of uncomfortable wear at the end of the day. Nearly half (48%) showed at least one of the six criteria. Uncomfortable hours of wear at the end of the day (31%) was the most commonly reported problem, followed by frequent or constant dryness (28%) and discomfort (17%).

Following the evaluation, 257 wearers were fit with senofilcon A lenses and reassessed two weeks later. Among subjects who reported problems before refitting, 88% said they noticed improvement in overall comfort, 76% in comfortable hours of wear, and 75% in frequency of dryness.

Environmental Factors Can Affect Eye Stress and Strain

While uncorrected or under-corrected vision problems can affect visual performance and comfort, eye stress and strain may also be caused by poor environmental conditions, such as glare, improper workstation set up, dirty screens, poor lighting and viewing angles, according to Dr. Anshel, who has helped companies and government agencies, including Mitsubishi, American Airlines, 3M, and the Department of Labor address the high stress area of vision demands in relation to working with computer monitors.

He offers the following advice to help prevent or reduce the development of vision-related problems:

REDUCE GLARE – Extraneous light, or glare, is the greatest source of eyestrain for computer users. No matter where your computer is relative to a window, adjustable shades, curtains or blinds should be used to effectively control light levels throughout the day. Avoid facing an un-shaded window since the difference in brightness between the screen and the area behind it may be cause eye stress and discomfort. Consider using an anti-glare screen to reduce reflections.

ADJUST YOUR MONITOR – Ideal monitor placement is dependent on several factors including an individual’s physical make-up and visual capabilities, work tasks, and other workstation design elements. For maximum eye comfort, Dr. Anshel recommends placing the center of the screen five to nine inches below your horizontal line of sight. “You should be looking just over the top of the monitor in your straight-ahead gaze,” he says.

TAKE A BREAK – “Our eyes were not made to see at a close distance for hours at a time without a break,” says Dr. Anshel. A preventive approach to reducing visual stress includes occasionally looking away from the screen of your computer. Dr. Anshel recommends the 20/20/20 rule. “Take a 20-second break every 20 minutes. Focus your eyes on points at least 20 feet from your terminal. Keep your eyes moving while looking at objects at various distances,” he says.

CONSULT YOUR EYE CARE PROFESSIONAL – For individuals whose jobs may require extensive time in front of a monitor, Dr. Anshel suggests a comprehensive eye examination soon after beginning computer work and periodically thereafter. “If, at any time, you experience any vision problems or discomfort, talk to your eye care professional,” he adds.

For additional tips, take the “Eye Q’s and Views” interactive quiz at computerquiz.jnjvision.

About the Survey

Americans’ Attitudes and Perceptions About Vision Care was conducted online and by telephone within the United States from March 8 – March 27, 2006 by Harris Interactive® on behalf of The Vision Care Institute™ of Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc. The survey queried a nationally representative cross section of 3,716 adults aged 18 and older. The survey was designed to comply with the code and standards of the Council of American Survey Research Organizations (CASRO) and the code of the National Council of Public Polls (NCPP). Data were weighted to represent the general population.

About ACUVUE® OASYS™ Brand Contact Lenses with HYDRACLEAR™PLUS

ACUVUE® OASYS™ is a breakthrough for contact lens wearers when their eyes feel tired and dry in challenging environments, such as long hours of computer use, frequent ground or air travel, or everyday exposure to heated or air conditioned surroundings. It is the first contact lens made from senofilcon A, a new silicone hydrogel material that is 50 percent smoother than currently available silicone hydrogel lenses. In addition to its smooth feel, the new lens also features HYDRACLEAR™ PLUS an improved formulation of the unique HYDRACLEAR™ technology that combines high performance base materials with a moisture-rich wetting agent. ACUVUE® OASYS™ block greater than 96 percent of UVA rays and 99 percent of UVB rays, meeting the highest UV-blocking standards for contact lenses.

ACUVUE® OASYS™ is indicated for daily wear vision correction and may also be worn for up to six consecutive nights/seven days of extended wear as recommended by an eye care professional. Contact lenses should not be worn for longer periods than recommended by an eye care professional. As with all contact lenses, eye problems, including corneal ulcers, can develop. Some wearers may also experience mild irritation, itching or discomfort. Lenses should not be worn if the wearer has an eye infection or experiences eye discomfort, excessive tearing, vision changes, redness or other eye problems. For more complete information patients should talk to their eye care professional, or call 1-800-843-2020 or visit acuvue.

Helps protect against transmission of harmful UV radiation to the cornea and into the eye.

WARNING:

UV-absorbing contact lenses are NOT substitutes for protective UV-absorbing eyewear such as UV-absorbing goggles or sunglasses because they do not completely cover the eye and surrounding area. You should continue to use UV-absorbing eyewear as directed.

Long term exposure to UV radiation is one of the risk factors associated with cataracts. Exposure is based on a number of factors such as environmental conditions (altitude, geography, cloud cover) and personal factors (extent and nature of outdoor activities). UV-Blocking contact lenses help provide protection against harmful UV radiation. However, clinical studies have not been done to demonstrate that wearing UV-Blocking contact lenses reduces the risk of developing cataracts or other eye disorders. Consult your eye care practitioner for more information.

ACUVUE® OASYS™ and HYDRACLEAR™ are trademarks of Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc.

ACUVUE® OASYS™
acuvue

Doing Good One Search Or One Purchase At A Time – Glaucoma Research Foundation

What if even a fraction of the billions of dollars generated by search engine advertisers and online shopping was directed towards glaucoma research and education?

That is the concept behind GoodSearch a new search engine powered by Yahoo! GoodSearch donates 50% of its revenue, approximately a penny per search, to the charities designated by its users. You use it exactly as you would any other search engine and the pennies add up quickly – just 500 people searching four times a day will earn around $7,300 in a year.

It is free and there is no need to register. Simply designate Glaucoma Research Foundation as your charity of choice on the GoodSearch or GoodShop home page!

Similarly with GoodShop, consumers are helping their favorite causes by shopping at hundreds of well-known retailers including Amazon, Target, Apple, Macy’s, Best Buy, Orbitz, Staples and others. The shopping experience and the prices are exactly the same as going to the retailer directly, but by going through GoodShop, up to 30% of the purchase price is donated the user’s favorite cause!

Glaucoma Research Foundation recently registered with the sites, giving its supporters a chance to raise money for the cause every time they search the Internet or shop online. The goal is to earn $7,000 through the site this year which will be used to fund critical research to find a cure for glaucoma.

More than 85,000 nonprofits and schools are now registered with GoodSearch and GoodShop and more than 100 organizations are registering daily. GoodSearch has quickly spread via word-of-mouth and the blogger community. Examples of other organizations listed on the site include: The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation which has earned more than $12,000; the ASPCA which has raised more than $30,000; and The Bubel/Aiken Foundation which supports children with disabilities and has earned more than $12,000.

Using GoodSearch is simple. Because the site is powered by Yahoo, users are assured of high quality results – but each time you search, money is generated by the advertisers for your favorite charity or school.

“Every penny counts”, says Andrew Jackson of the Glaucoma Research Foundation. “While doing a search or shopping online, why not raise money for our cause? There is no reason not to use GoodSearch and GoodShop – it’s an easy way to get involved and help.”

“We know there are a lot of people who want to do good but may not have the time or the money to help out.” said Ken Ramberg, Co-Founder of GoodSearch and former President of MonsterTRAK, the largest online career site for college students (now a division of Monster). “GoodSearch and GoodShop make it as easy as possible. We’ve taken something people do every day – searching the Internet and shopping online – and have turned it into doing good.”

Source
Glaucoma Research Foundation

High Infrared Power Levels From Some Green Lasers Measured By NIST Researchers

Green laser pointers have become a popular consumer item, delivering light that’s brighter to the eye than red lasers, but stories have circulated on the Web about the potential hazards of inexpensive models. Now, a team led by physicist Charles Clark at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) puts some numbers to the problem. In one case, the group found that a green laser pointer emitted almost twice its rated power level of light – but at invisible and potentially dangerous infrared wavelengths rather than green. A new NIST technical note* describes the nature of the problem as well as a home test using an inexpensive webcam that can detect excess infrared light from green lasers.

Late last year, the research team purchased three low-cost green laser pointers advertised to have a power output of 10 milliwatts (mW). Measurements showed that one unit emitted dim green light but delivered infrared levels of nearly 20 mW – powerful enough to cause retinal damage to an individual before he or she is aware of the invisible light. NIST’s Jemellie Galang and her colleagues repeated the tests with several other laser pointers and found similarly intense infrared emissions in some but not all units.

The problem stems from inadequate procedures in manufacturing quality assurance, according to the research team. Inside a green laser pointer, infrared light from a semiconductor diode laser pumps infrared light at a wavelength of 808 nm into a transparent crystal of yttrium orthovanadate doped with neodymium atoms (Nd:YVO4), causing the crystal to lase even deeper in the infrared, at 1064 nm. This light passes through a crystal of potassium titanyl phosphate (KTP), which emits light of half the wavelength: 532 nm, the familiar color of the green laser pointer.

However, if the KTP crystal is misaligned, little of the 1064 nm light is converted into green light, and most of it comes out as infrared. Excess infrared leakage can also occur if the coatings at both ends of the crystal that act as mirrors for the infrared laser light are too thin.

The NIST team says this problem could be solved by incorporating an inexpensive infrared filter at the end of the laser, which could reduce infrared emissions by 100-1000 times depending on quality and cost. Although these filters exist in modern digital cameras and more expensive green laser pointers, they often are left out of the inexpensive models.

The team demonstrates a home test that laser hobbyists could conduct to detect excessive infrared leakage, by using a common digital or cell phone camera, a compact disc, a webcam and a TV remote control. Regardless, they say owners of the devices should never point the lasers at the eyes or aim them at surfaces such as windows, which can reflect infrared light back to the user – a particularly subtle hazard because many modern energy-saving windows have coatings designed specifically to reflect infrared.

Notes:

The researchers are all members of the Joint Quantum Institute, a collaboration of NIST and the University of Maryland. Co-author Edward W. Hagley is also at Acadia Optronics in Rockville, MD.

* J. Galang, A. Restelli, E.W. Hagley and C.W. Clark, NIST Technical Note (TN 1668), A Green Laser Pointer Hazard (July 2010)

Source:
Ben Stein
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

Study Published In The American Journal Of Ophthalmology Examines Investigational Use Of Macugen In Patients With Branch Retinal Vein Occlusion

Eyetech Inc. announced the results of a preliminary study assessing the investigational use of Macugen for macular edema secondary to branch retinal vein occlusion (BRVO) that were published in the January issue of the American Journal of Ophthalmology (AJO). The uncontrolled, dose-finding study showed that half of the patients in the study (N=20) gained at least 3 lines of vision by 30 weeks with Macugen injections administered at 6-week intervals, and patients maintained these improvements for the duration of the 54-week study. The response was shown to be rapid after the first injection, with a mean improvement of approximately 2 lines of vision after 1 week. Investigators also observed a reduction in retinal thickness and macular volume at both 0.3 mg and 1.0 mg doses of Macugen, suggesting a positive effect.

“This small study provides early and encouraging evidence that Macugen may be an effective option for the treatment of BRVO,” said John Wroblewski, M.D., lead author of the paper. “While these findings are promising, randomized and controlled clinical trials are needed to evaluate the efficacy, optimal treatment interval and duration, and safety of Macugen in patients with BRVO.”

After 54 weeks and a mean number of Macugen injections of 7.2, the mean best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) improved 14 letters over baseline, mean center point thickness decreased 205 ?�m, and mean macular volume decreased 2.2 mm3. Similar improvements in mean BCVA were seen with the 0.3 mg and 1 mg doses. At week 1, 47% of eyes had gained at least 10 letters and 18% had gained 15 letters or more. At week 30, 50% of eyes had gained 15 or more letters. These improvements were sustained at 54 weeks.

One retinal detachment and no cases of endophthalmitis or traumatic cataract were seen in the study. There was also no evidence of a sustained effect on intraocular pressure or of an increased risk of systemic adverse events related to VEGF inhibition detected.

About the Study

The study, entitled “Pegaptanib Sodium for Macular Edema Secondary to Branch Retinal Vein Occlusion,” was a prospective, randomized, dose-finding non-controlled study conducted at three clinical practices in the United States. Twenty patients who had a 1 to 6 month history of macular edema secondary to BRVO were randomized to receive intravitreal injections of either 0.3 mg Macugen (N=15) or 1 mg Macugen (N=5) at baseline and at weeks 6 and 12, with subsequent injections at 6-week intervals at investigator discretion until week 48. Principal efficacy outcomes were: change from baseline to week 54 in BCVA, center point thickness, central subfield thickness, and macular volume as measured by optical tomography.

About Retinal Vein Occlusion (RVO)

Retinal vein occlusion (RVO) is a blockage in the blood supply from the retina, causing swelling (macular edema) and hemorrhages which often leads to sudden blurring or vision loss in all or part of one eye. It is second only to diabetic retinopathy as a cause of vision loss due to retinal vascular disease. There are two types of RVO: branch retinal vein occlusion (BRVO) and central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO). BRVO occurs when one of the branches of the main vein is blocked and CRVO occurs when the main vein of the eye is blocked. Most retinal vein occlusions occur after age 50, although younger patients are sometimes seen with this disorder. The highest rate of occurrence is in individuals in their 60’s and 70’s.

About Macugen

Macugen, a selective inhibitor of VEGF-165, is approved in the United States for the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration (neovascular AMD) and is administered in a 0.3-mg dose once every six weeks by intravitreal injection. Macugen is a pegylated anti-VEGF aptamer, which binds to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). VEGF is a protein that plays a critical role in angiogenesis (the formation of new blood vessels) and increased permeability (leakage from blood vessels), two pathological processes that contribute to the vision loss associated with neovascular AMD.

Source
Eyetech Inc.

View drug information on Macugen.