The Scotsman

Cataract ops to be taken to high street

- By SCOTT REID scott.reid@jpimedia.co.uk

Edinburgh Bioscience­s has signed a multi-million pound licensing and equity investment deal in China, as the firm looks to take cataract treatment from the operating theatre to the high street.

The ten-year agreement has been struck with China’s Haoguang, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Boye Biotech.

Capital-headquarte­red Edinburgh Bioscience­s (EBS) has raised some £3 million to date and is about to embark on a major £5m series A round, as the eyecare technology specialist looks to radically improve and shorten the pathway of care for cataract patients.

More than 20 million cataract operations took place worldwide last year, and the technology being developed by the EBS team provides an alternativ­e to surgery by noninvasiv­e treatment and is seen as offering a significan­t reduction in cost per patient.

Underpinne­d by years of research and developmen­t and having reached a series of clinical trial milestones, the system deploys LED technology for diagnosis, monitoring and treatment and is on course to make cataract treatment delivery up to 90 per cent quicker by taking cataract treatment from operating theatres to a high street clinical setting.

This may also help alleviate hospital waiting lists that have been exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

EBS is targeting the European, UK and Chinese markets in its first phase of commercial­isation, and plans to sell its technology to clinical optometry and ophthalmol­ogy providers, as well as other eye and healthcare industry players.

Chief executive Graham Bell previously led corporate developmen­t, and mergers and acquisitio­ns at Nasdaqlist­ed

University of Dundee spin-out Cyclacel Pharmaceut­icals, while chairman David Quigley, a qualified optometris­t and joint venture partner with Specsavers Opticians in Scotland, also chairs Optometry Scotland.

EBS was founded by Professor Des Smith, a top Scottish bioscience entreprene­ur, who remains on the board.

Bell said: “EBS is positioned to revolution­ise cataract treatment, first in the European, UK and China markets, and then worldwide.

“The technology we have developed will change the pathway of care for cataract patients, meaning treatment can be administer­ed in a local setting rather than in an operating theatre. When you factor in hospital waiting lists that have only been exacerbate­d by Covid, the timing is opportune for a drastic change to the status quo where surgery is the sole solution for a cataract.”

Quigley added: “As an industry, we’ve been seeking a more effective solution for tackling the cataract challenge and the impact it has on patients and hospital waiting times.

“The team has proven, most recently through successful clinical trials, that the technology will be a game-changer, deliverabl­e convenient­ly, safely and efficientl­y in a nonsurgica­l setting.

“While focusing on the European, UK and China markets over the initial phase, we envisage even greater market opportunit­ies worldwide going forward.”

 ??  ?? 0 Graham Bell and David Quigley of Edinburgh Bioscience­s with the company’s LEDINBIO device.
0 Graham Bell and David Quigley of Edinburgh Bioscience­s with the company’s LEDINBIO device.

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