Toronto Star

Organ donors can provide the gift of sight

Eye bank says many registered donors are reticent to donate eyes, but the need is great Alvin Hallett, 82, of Burk’s Falls, has his sight back thanks to an eye donor.

- SHERYL UBELACKER

It should have been a relatively uncomplica­ted surgery — removing a cataract in Alvin Hallett’s right eye. But somehow the surgeon accidental­ly struck his cornea, rendering him blind in that eye.

“I had no vision whatsoever,” the 82-year-old from Burk’s Falls, Ont., south of North Bay, said of the April 2017 incident. “I couldn’t see to drive. My wife had to do all the driving. I couldn’t see to boat on the lake. I couldn’t plant my little garden. All I could do was ride my riding lawn mower and cut all my grass.”

But a year later, Hallett’s vision was restored with a corneal transplant, thanks to one of the 2,300 deceased Ontarians who each year donate eye tissue to give others the gift of sight.

Of those 2,300 pairs of eyes, tissue from about 1,700 are used for corneal transplant­s, said Christine Humphreys, director of the Eye Bank of Canada. “And, also in addition to the cornea, we have over 600 other ocular surgeries take place.”

How donated eye tissue is removed and stored depends on the needs of recipients, she said.

“We get the whole globes, but we also get just the corneas,” Humphreys said. “We don’t have to take the whole eye.”

The cornea is the transparen­t layer covering the front of the eye, which lies over the iris and pupil. Donated corneas are stored in a refrigerat­ed chamber, bathed in a medium containing nutrients and antibiotic­s, and remain viable for transplant for about 10 days.

The sclera, the white part of the eye surroundin­g the cornea, is used for a number of surgical procedures, including as a graft or patch in glaucoma surgery. Sclera tissue is stored at room temperatur­e in alcohol and also has a relatively short shelf life.

The Eye Bank of Canada, which despite its name serves only Ontario, has been storing eye tissue since 1955, and is now affiliated with the non-profit com- munity-based organizati­on Kensington Health. Other provinces operate their own eye banks.

Humphreys said that like other tissues and organs from deceased donors, the demand for eye tissue lags supply: for instance, the average wait time for a cornea transplant in Ontario is 252 days — or more than eight months.

Of the 12.4 million residents of the province who are eligible to become donors, just over four million have registered to donate their organs and other tissues. And of those, about 400,000 elected not to tick the box for eye tissue, representi­ng the highest exclusion rate of all organs and tissues that can be donated after death.

Humphreys admitted there are barriers to people agreeing to donate their eye tissue, often for religious or cultural reasons, but sometimes because of common misconcept­ions about eligibilit­y or the process.

“One reason we hear all the time is ‘I don’t see very well,’ ‘I’ve had eye surgery’ or ‘I’m too old’ or ‘I’ve had cancer,’” she said. “And the fact is there are very few things that can result in not being a donor,” including having had a form of ocular surgery or cancer.

Some families worry that recovery of a loved one’s eye tissue would delay their funeral, which for religious reasons may need to be scheduled within 24 hours of death.

“But often we can meet that need, make the donation happen more quick- ly,” Humphreys said.

There can also be psychologi­cal barriers for some potential donors and their families, given such beliefs as the eyes being the “windows of the soul.”

“Some people think (their loved one) might be disfigured. A lot of people don’t know we can recover just the corneas, leave behind the rest of the eye if they want.”

As well, funeral homes can use prosthetic­s to obscure the fact that eye tissue has been removed.

Hallett, who retired in 2000, said his corneal transplant and subsequent cataract operation by a Toronto surgeon earlier this year has given him back his life.

“I’ve got good vision, very good. I can do anything I want,” he said, adding that he is so grateful to the anonymous donor that “I can’t even express what I feel.”

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