They now hope to conduct the first clinical trials in patients within the next five years. "These results have significant therapeutic implications," said Dr Rajendra Apte, an ophthalmologist at Washington University School of Medicine who led the study. "We may be able to modify drugs that already are available and use them to deliver treatment to the eye." Dr Rajendra and his colleagues, whose work is published in the journal of Cell Metabolism, found a key link between macular degeneration and cholesterol can build up in white blood cells known as macrophages – which are an important part of the immune system and cause inflammation. With age, these white blood cells can become bloated with cholesterol and can cause new blood vessels to grow underneath the retina in the eye. This excessive growth of new blood vessels can cause them to rupture and lead to the retina becoming scarred, causing loss of the light sensitive cells at the back of the eye, and so blindness. Dr Apte found that drugs which help macrophages to rid themselves of cholesterol stopped the growth of new blood vessels in the eyes of ageing mice with AMD. Immune cells taken from human AMD patients also showed greater ability to inhibit blood vessel growth when given the drugs in the laboratory. The researchers looked at two cholesterol regulators in their study and found they both reduced blood vessel growth. They believe using several drugs in combination may improve the treatment further. Dr Apte said that eye drops that lowered cholesterol in macrophages could be given to patients at risk of developing AMD, which is often hereditary, or for those in the early stages. Dr Apte said: "People with earlier stages of AMD could potentially be treated with the aim of delaying or preventing progression." Cathy Yelf, from the Macular Society, which supports research into macular degeneration, welcomed the research. She said: "Finding a way of preventing late-stage macular degeneration from developing would be the best way of overcoming it. "As many as 650,000 people in the UK will have late-stage AMD by 2020 so research into this area is vital. Clearly this is at an early stage but we will follow the progress of the work with great interest." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9966518/Eye-drops-could-treat-macular-degeneration.html raviEye drops could treat macular degeneration
Eye drops that could prevent one of the most common causes of blindness are being developed by scientists.
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