Summary
Read the full fact sheet- Corneal transplants replace the 'window of the eye' if it is diseased or damaged.
- Only corneas, not eyes, can be transplanted.
- Only human donor tissue can be used in corneal transplantation surgery.
- If you wish to be an eye donor after your death, tell your family.
On this page
The cornea is the 'window of the eye' – the clear dome-like surface at the front of the eye and the main focusing element. If a cornea becomes cloudy from disease, injury or infection, vision is dramatically reduced.
A corneal transplant is a surgical procedure that replaces a disc-shaped segment of an unhealthy cornea with a similarly shaped piece of healthy donor cornea. Only human donor tissue can be used in corneal transplantation surgery. This operation is also called a corneal graft or keratoplasty.
Conditions that require a corneal transplant
The most common reasons for requiring a transplant are:
- Dystrophy’s directly affecting the cornea, the most common being Fuch’s Dystrophy where the cornea becomes opaque leading to loss of vision. Other dystrophies are lattice, granular, macular dystrophies.
- bullous keratopathy – a condition in which the cornea becomes permanently swollen
- keratoconus – a corneal dystrophy in which the central zone of the cornea thins and becomes irregularly curved eye injury
- herpes virus infection of the eye
- corneal scarring due to trauma
- hereditary or congenital corneal clouding
- severe bacterial infection.
Corneal transplantation procedure
Corneal transplant is the oldest and most common form of human transplantation (other than blood transfusion). In Australia, approximately 2,000 corneal transplants are performed each year.
Corneal transplantation success rates
Cornea transplant operations are very successful. According to the Australian Corneal Graft Registry, the average one-year transplant survival rate is approximately 90 per cent, decreasing to 75 per cent at five years.
Cornea donation
Almost anyone can donate their corneas (or other parts of their eyes). Unlike in organ donation, age and blood type are unimportant in determining cornea donor suitability. Similarly, donor eye colour and eyesight quality are not barriers to donation.
However, people with severe infections, haematological malignancies, transmissible neuropathological diseases, or communicable diseases such as HIV and hepatitis, cannot donate their corneas. Suitability after previous eye surgery or in the donor is assessed at the time of donation.
Register as a donor
Telling your next of kin about your wishes is crucial for you to become a cornea donor at the time of your death. Individuals can also register with the Australian Organ Donor Register.
Using donated corneas
An eye bank is notified on the death of a potential donor who meets preliminary donation criteria. Retrieval of the cornea typically occurs within hours of death.
If a donor cornea is unsuitable for transplant, eyes may be used for research and training, when consent is given for that purpose.
Where to get help
- Corneal transplantation, Centre for Eye Research Australia.