Looking back at 2024 with our colleagues from Optometry Times

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The top therapeutic advancements in myopia, diabetes, dry eye and more

Calendar pages for 2024 are peeling away, replaced by pages for 2024. The message below reads, "We wish you a happy new year." Image credit: ©simbos – stock.adobe.com

Our colleagues at Optometry Times share the top stories of 2024. Image credit: ©simbos – stock.adobe.com

To close out the year, we are showcasing top content from our colleagues at Ophthalmology TimesModern Retina, and Optometry Times. Watch the Ophthalmology Times Europe website all week for the year's top stories from the Eye Care Network.

As is tradition in popular culture, it's time to wrap up the year with a list of what happened in 2024 at Optometry Times. We traversed many topics together, from great strides in artificial intelligence (AI) to a renewed sense of urgency in myopia management research, and the editors and staff appreciate your readership this year and look forward to learning together in 2025.

Myopia

Back in February, Kate Gifford, PhD, BAppSc(Optom)Hons, asked clinicians to evaluate their “why” behind myopia management. Gifford challenged optometrists to look beyond the flashy new technology and remember that the goal is to slow progression in any way that works with patients’ and their parents’ lifestyles. Read more about Gifford’s views on myopia management here.

In the spring, Pauline Cho, BOptom, Med, PhD, and Bi Yang shared their expertise in myopia control. Cho and Yang examine the efficacy of ortho-k and myopia control soft contact lenses, and then they look to the future. They discuss the merits of repeated low-level red light laser therapy, which targets neuronal energy metabolism for neurotherapy of myopia. Partial recovery was achieved 3 months after discontinuation of the therapy. Read more about the present and future of myopia management here.

Carly Lam, PhD, MsC, continues the conversation on the future of myopia in an interview with Hattie Hayes, editor of Ophthalmology Times Europe. Lam shares fresh data on a 8-year study of defocus incorporated multiple segments (DIMS) spectacle lenses. She shared her predictions for the next decade of myopia control, including the barriers that will make or break DIMS lenses in Europe, Asia, and North America. She also urged eye care providers to take myopia more seriously and treat it for what it is: a progressive disease with life-long impact. Learn more from Lam here.

Dry eye

Your first patient of the day’s chief complaint is “I have pain behind my eye,” “I have a headache over my eye,” “My vision is fluctuating,” “My eyes are itchy and red,” or all of the above. Where do you start? Shawna Vanderhoof, OD, FAAO, answers this question by examining allergy’s role, which may cause additional symptoms in addition to ocular allergies. Read more about the relationship between sinus congestion and dry eye syndrome here.

Mile Brujic, OD, FAAO, tackled another common factor in dry eye: tear evaporation. Brujic examines evaporative dry eye, which is caused by meibomian gland dysfunction. Although not all cases are evaporative dry eye, most have an evaporative component, he writes. Read more about the role of tear evaporation in dry eye disease here.

In October, Katherine M. Mastrota, MS, OD, FAAO, Dipl ABO, wrote on drug delivery systems for dry eye disease. While drops are the most widely used vehicle, Mastrota underscores the limitations, namely, low bioavailability and formulations that feature excipients and/or preservatives. She writes that the ideal solution would be to stimulate more natural tears, which may be achieved via stimulation of the trigeminal nerve pathway. Read more about trigeminal nerve stimulation here.

In August, Ryan Beck, OD, tackled the practice management side of dry eye with a helpful how-to guide on integrating new treatments into your clinic. His 3-step process can help clinicians who are interested in ramping up their dry eye offerings, but are unsure of where to begin. Read more about adding dry eye services to your clinic here.

Advancements in retinal and diabetes care

Retina may be in the back of the eye, but it’s rarely in the back of the mind; luckily, research on new therapeutics for retinal disease is always brimming with something new. In September, James L. Fanelli, OD, FAAO, wrote on the ever-changing treatment paradigm of geographic atrophy. Fanelli writes on the 2 recently approved therapeutics intended to slow the progression of geographic atrophy, and he also shares tips for high-quality fundus autofluorescence imaging to make a great referral if the patient is a good candidate for treatment. Optometrists play an important role in finding and reporting geographic atrophy lesions and helping patients chart a path forward. Learn more about the evolution of practice patterns in geographic atrophy here.

In October, Betty Zhang, OD, shared a piece on her experience as the only optometrist in a retina specialty clinic. Though she was intimated at first, she made herself an invaluable part of the clinic. Learn more about her journey here.

An interesting study was also published this fall, wherein investigators examined the effect of caffeine on retinal vessel density. The study that explored the effects of caffeine on systolic and diastolic blood pressure and retinal vessel density assessed by optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A) found that 200 mg of caffeine elevated the BP after 2 hours but did not impact the retinal vessel density. Learn more about caffeine’s effects on retinal vessel density here.

Another trend in 2024 was the explosion of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RA) to treat diabetes and stimulate weight loss. A. Paul Chous, MA, OD, FAAO, investigates the good, the bad, and the ugly of these drugs as he discusses the effects on the retina and diabetic eye disease. Learn more about pharmacologic weight loss and its effects on diabetes management and eye care here.

Technology

In our last cover story of the year, Easy Anyama, OD, and Lori Grover, OD, PhD, FAAO, discuss one of the hottest topics of the year: How can you use AI in your clinic to lighten the workload for you and your staff without sacrificing medical ethics? The authors encourage optometrists not to fear AI, but to take the time to learn more about different types to ensure proper use of the technology. Read more about how to use AI ethically in your practice here.

Back in February, Jason E. Vice, PhD, OT, SCLV, shares a few of the most helpful pieces of technology he uses as an occupational therapist working in low vision rehabilitation. Vice walks through devices that aid in functional vision, diagnostic tools, and new and fascinating technology that leverages AI to help patients find their way around the world. Learn more about the technology revolutionizing low vision care here.

Jason Bacharach, MD, also tackles new technology that can make an exam much easier. His practice recently transitioned from a traditional bowl perimeter for visual field testing to a portable vision diagnostic, and the reviews from both patients and staff have been a rave. Learn more about how this virtual reality visual field diagnostic works here.

It’s been a big year for AI, and little shows that more than AOAExcel’s recent investment and endorsement of Barti Software. Barti is an eye care electronic health records company that allows providers to chart in real time with an AI scribe. It also has features powered by AI Office Copilot and a VoIP phone system that allows patients to schedule appointments 24/7. Barti is the first electronic health records company to be endorsed by AOAExcel. Learn more about Barti here.

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