News Releases
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Ron Walli
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Communications & External Relations
(865) 576-0226
Dena Owens
University of Tennessee Health Science Center
Media Relations and Communications Specialist
(901) 448-4072
ORNL, UT project could save vision of millions
OAK RIDGE,
Tenn., Feb. 17, 2009 – In the blink of an eye, people at risk of becoming blind
can now be screened for eye diseases such as diabetic retinopathy and
age-related macular degeneration.
Using a
technology originally developed at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge
National Laboratory to understand semiconductor defects, three locations in
Memphis have been equipped with digital cameras that take pictures of the
retina. Those images are relayed to a center where they are analyzed and the
patient knows in minutes whether he or she needs additional medical attention.
“Once we’ve
taken pictures of the eyes, we transmit that information to our database, where
it is compared to thousands of images of known retinal disease states,” said
Ken Tobin, who led the ORNL team that developed the technology. “From there, the
computer system is able to determine whether the patient passes the screening
or it provides a follow-up plan that includes seeing an ophthalmologist.”
Already, this technology
is making a difference as two patients at the Church Health Center in Memphis
have been identified as needing laser treatment for moderate and severe
diabetic retinopathy and macular edema, both conditions that can lead to
blindness.
While some
cameras have been installed, others will be installed at several rural and
urban health care centers serving the Mississippi Delta. Another camera is planned
for a federally funded health center in Chattanooga. Eventually, the goal is to
have hundreds of cameras throughout the United States and beyond. If disease
can be detected early, treatments can preserve vision and significantly reduce
the occurrence of debilitating blindness.
This project
takes advantage of ORNL’s proprietary content-based image retrieval technology,
which quickly sorts through large databases and finds visually similar images.
For more than a decade manufacturers of semiconductors have used this
technology to rapidly scan hundreds of thousands of tiny semiconductors to
learn quickly about problems in the manufacturing process.
“Our approach
allows us to adapt a proven technology to describe key regions of the retina,
and this information can then be used to index images in a content-based image
retrieval library,” Tobin said. “What separates this from other methods is that
we have automated the process of diagnosing retinal disease by capturing the
expert knowledge of an ophthalmologist in a patient archive.”
Leading the
medical portion of the project is Edward Chaum, an
ophthalmologist and Plough Foundation professor of retinal diseases at the
University of Tennessee Health Science Center (http://www.eye.uthsc.edu)
Hamilton Eye Institute in Memphis. Chaum, the lead
researcher on the National Eye Institute grant that has funded much of this
research, is especially excited about the number of people, particularly the
indigent and medically underserved communities, that this technology will help.
“Right now, with
21 million diabetics in the United States, we need to be screening 400,000
patients for diabetic eye disease every week,” Chaum
said. “Less than half of these diabetics receive the recommended annual eye
exam, which is absolutely essential to minimize serious eye complications and potential
blindness.”
By 2050 the
number of diabetics in the United States is expected to double, so the task of
screening patients becomes even more daunting. Looking beyond the United States
and more near term, the World Health Organization estimates that by 2025 more
than 1 million patients will need to be screened worldwide for diabetes every
day.
“To reach this
goal, we are going to have to change the health care delivery paradigm,” Chaum said, “and that will mean distributing these cameras
to clinics and offices of primary care physicians.”
Over the next
few months, a more fully automated image analysis network managing images
nationwide -- and eventually worldwide -- will be rolled out, according to Chaum, who envisions this being a global effort using
automated technology and the connectivity of the World Wide Web.
Other
researchers involved in this project are Tom Karnowski
and Luca Giancardo of ORNL’s Measurement Science and
Systems Engineering Division, Stacy Li of the University of Tennessee Health
Science Center in Memphis and Karen Fox of the Delta Health Alliance.
The researchers
have published a number of papers, most recently in Retina, The Journal of
Retinal and Vitreous Diseases. The paper, titled “Automated Retinal Diagnosis
by CBIR,” appears in Vol. 28, No. 10 (2008).
Additional
funding for this project, begun in June 2004 through ORNL’s Laboratory Directed
Research and Development program, has been provided by the National Eye
Institute, The Plough Foundation, the Army Medical and Material Command, the
University of Tennessee Health Science Center and the U.S. Health Resources and
Services Administration.
UT-Battelle
manages Oak Ridge National Laboratory for the Department of Energy.
###
You may read other press releases from Oak Ridge National Laboratory or learn more about the lab at http://www.ornl.gov/news
This study
quantifies the economic impact of the UTHSC on the economy of the state of Tennessee for FY2010.
Contact Us
920 Madison Avenue
Suite 434
Memphis, TN 38163
Phone: (901) 448-5544
Fax: (901) 448-8640
