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Are Eye Drops the Best Route for Ophthalmic Therapy?
28 November 2018
Are Eye Drops the Best Route for Ophthalmic Therapy?

ARE EYE DROPS THE BEST ROUTE FOR OPHTHALMIC THERAPY?
November 28th, 2018

Eye drops have long been the mainstay of ophthalmic drug delivery. Yet they cause ocular surface problems and often traverse the cornea poorly with little reaching the posterior segment. Is there anything we can do about this? The aim of any therapy would be to have good compliance and effective and easy drug delivery.

This workshop allows an in-depth view in to the different technologies that are available to either effect improved results from topical therapy (be it drops, gels or ointments) and also the limitations and uses of both externally and internally implantable drug delivery devices.

The workshop will allow you to gain a full understanding of the technology available at present and its limitations.

View workshop programme on the Download Centre

Workshop Leaders:
Sunil Shah, Professor, Aston University
Afzal Mohammed
, Professor, Aston University
Raid Alany
, Chair in Pharmaceutical Formulation and Drug Delivery, Aston University

Workshop LEADER

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Sunil Shah

Professor, Aston University

Professor Sunil Shah qualified from St. Georges Hospital Medical School and completed his post-graduate training in Torquay, Exeter, Manchester and Nottingham. He has been a Consultant at the Birmingham and Midland Eye Centre since 2000 where he runs a cornea and cataract service. Professor Shah is a Section Editor for the British Journal of Ophthalmology and a reviewer for Eye, American Journal of Ophthalmology, Ophthalmology, Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Contact Lens and Anterior Eye, Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery and Journal of Refractive Surgery. He is also an honorary Professor at the University of Ulster, a Professor at Aston University and an honorary Professor at UKM Medical Centre, Malaysia. Professor Shah also provides specialist advice to NICE and is a representative for the Royal College of Ophthalmologists to the British Standards Institute. He is the Principle Editor and E Tutor for the E-learning course in Refractive surgery for the University of Ulster. He represents the Royal College of Ophthalmologists on its refractive sub-committee and its academic committee and he is a past President of the British Society for Refractive Surgery and a past council member for the British Contact Lens Association.

FEATURED SPEAKERS

Afzal Mohammed

Afzal Mohammed

Professor, Aston University
Raid Alany

Raid Alany

Chair in Pharmaceutical Formulation and Drug Delivery, Kingston University

Afzal Mohammed

Professor, Aston University
Afzal Mohammed

Afzal Mohammed is Professor of Pharmaceutics and Head of Pharmaceutics at Aston University. He is an internationally leading scientist and a key opinion leader in paediatric formulation development. The translational interface of his research is funded by grants from various bodies including MRC, EPSRC, BBSRC and NC3R as well as funding from various international pharmaceutical companies and INNOVATE UK. He has presented his research findings at major national and international conferences and was awarded Fellowship of the Academy of Pharmaceutical Sciences in 2017. Research from his group has led to a total of 102 publications which include research articles, review papers, journal editorials, book chapters, PhD theses, published conference proceedings and patent applications as well as over 80 abstracts at various national and international conferences. Afzal serves as an Associate Editor for the Journal of Pharmaceutics as well as BMC Journal of Pharmacology and Toxicology and is on the editorial board for four other journals including Nature Scientific Reports. Afzal Mohammed is the lead inventor of a patented novel dry particle coating technology (WO 2016/066462 A1). He set up Aston Particle Technologies Ltd (www.astonparticletechnologies.com) in July 2016 to unlock the commercial potential for the technology.

Raid Alany

Chair in Pharmaceutical Formulation and Drug Delivery, Kingston University
Raid Alany

Professor Raid Alany’s academic journey spans three continents; namely, Asia, Oceania and Europe. A pharmacy graduate and a registered New Zealand pharmacist; Raid received his PhD in ocular drug delivery from the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand in 2001. He then became a Senior Lecturer and Head of Pharmaceutics at the School of Pharmacy, The University of Auckland in New Zealand and later joined Kingston University London where he was appointed Research Director for the School of Pharmacy and Chemistry and the Inaugural Head of School of Life Sciences, Pharmacy and Chemistry. This ‘’super’’ school is the largest in Kingston University London comprising four departments, well over 2000 students, over 100 academic staff. His research team at Kingston comprised a CARA Visiting Fellow, Leverhulme Visiting Fellow, ten PhD students and a Sparks Research Fellow working on a range of drug delivery projects; he has supervised to completion 22 Masters by Research and PhD students. Raid is an author on over 200 scientific research publications (papers and abstracts), a book and seven book chapters; he has attracted over $NZ 2M (£GBP 1M) in contestable research and enterprise funding. Professor Alany acts as an editor and serves on the editorial boards for many journals and publications. He is past president of the New Zealand Chapter of the Controlled Release Society (NZCRS) and past member of the Scientific Steering Group of the New Zealand National Eye Centre, the International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) and Australasian Pharmaceutical Scientists Association (APSA). He has won several awards and consults for pharmaceutical companies in New Zealand and Singapore and is an inventor on several international patents; he receives regular invitations to present at international meetings.

Sunil Shah

Professor, Aston University
Sunil Shah

Professor Sunil Shah qualified from St. Georges Hospital Medical School and completed his post-graduate training in Torquay, Exeter, Manchester and Nottingham. He has been a Consultant at the Birmingham and Midland Eye Centre since 2000 where he runs a cornea and cataract service. Professor Shah is a Section Editor for the British Journal of Ophthalmology and a reviewer for Eye, American Journal of Ophthalmology, Ophthalmology, Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Contact Lens and Anterior Eye, Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery and Journal of Refractive Surgery. He is also an honorary Professor at the University of Ulster, a Professor at Aston University and an honorary Professor at UKM Medical Centre, Malaysia. Professor Shah also provides specialist advice to NICE and is a representative for the Royal College of Ophthalmologists to the British Standards Institute. He is the Principle Editor and E Tutor for the E-learning course in Refractive surgery for the University of Ulster. He represents the Royal College of Ophthalmologists on its refractive sub-committee and its academic committee and he is a past President of the British Society for Refractive Surgery and a past council member for the British Contact Lens Association.

Workshop agenda

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13:00

Registration & Coffee

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13:30

Workshop leader introduction

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13:40

Nanotechnology

Afzal Mohammed, Professor, Aston University

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14:20

Age-related eye diseases: how can drug delivery research help?

Raid Alany, Chair in Pharmaceutical Formulation and Drug Delivery, Kingston University

  • In the UK almost 2 million people suffer from sight loss; of those, around 360,000 are registered partially sighted or blind
  • Up to one in every three people over the age of 65 experiences problems with dry eyes
  • The physiological functions and biochemical processes of the eye decline with aging
  • The main age-related sight loss causes are cataract, glaucoma, ARMD and diabetic retinopathy
  • Pharmaceutical formulations and drug delivery systems help restore vision
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    15:00

    Afternoon Tea

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    15:30

    Externally implantable devices

    Sunil Shah, Professor, Aston University

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    16:10

    Internally implantable devices

    Sunil Shah, Professor, Aston University

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    16:50

    Close of workshop


    Professor
    Aston University
    Chair in Pharmaceutical Formulation and Drug Delivery
    Kingston University
    Professor
    Aston University

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