PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Transforming UK eye health research by linking national data resources

2025-11-06
(Press-News.org) The world’s largest collection of curated eye imaging and linked clinical data is expanding across the country, in an initiative led out of Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and UCL (University College London).

The INSIGHT Health Data Research Hub for Eye Health and Oculomics is benefiting from investment funding of £3.7 million awarded by UKRI Medical Research Council (MRC) and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR).

INSIGHT will expand from Moorfields Eye Hospital and create a blueprint for linking NHS sites across the country, supporting research, improving patient care, and fostering innovation in eye health.

As part of a four-year programme of work delivered through Moorfields Eye Hospital’s strategic partnership with the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, INSIGHT will on-board NHS sites including Sunderland Eye Infirmary, one of the UK’s largest regional centres for ophthalmology, working in collaboration with South Tyneside and Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust and North East North Cumbria Secure Data Environment.

INSIGHT will also broaden national data linkages and integrate genetic data from the NIHR BioResource and UK Biobank to accelerate oculomics research, which uses biomarkers in the eye to detect systemic conditions such as dementia and cardiovascular disease.

Patient and public representatives will play a central role, working with project leads to embed standards for data access and governance, address risks of bias in artificial intelligence, and ensure equitable benefits for underserved communities.

The enhanced INSIGHT research data platform will grow from over 30 million images — currently more ophthalmic data than the top three centres in the US combined — to some 50 million images, consolidating the UK as the global leader in ophthalmology and oculomics research and innovation.

INSIGHT Director Professor Pearse Keane (UCL Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Hospital) said: “This funding allows us to expand INSIGHT from Moorfields Eye Hospital into a truly national resource, with significant benefits for clinical research and public health. Ophthalmology is the busiest NHS speciality, increasingly under pressure as patient need grows. By providing a comprehensive, interoperable research resource for ophthalmic data, we can help to accelerate research discoveries, bring new treatments to patients faster, and ultimately reduce the burden of sight-threatening disease in the UK and globally.”

Moorfields Eye Hospital CEO Peter Ridley commented: “The potential of NHS data to improve patient outcomes and tackle health inequalities is immense. We are proud that the INSIGHT Hub has led the way in harnessing routinely collected NHS eye imaging data for medical research, demonstrating how patient data can be optimised for research in a safe and secure way, involving patients and members of the public in decision-making. With this grant funding, we anticipate entering an exciting new phase in the Hub’s development, supporting the UK’s ambitions as a global leader in healthcare technology.”

The award is one of five announced by UKRI MRC and the NIHR to enhance biomedical and health-related data and digital platform resources in the UK, following a UKRI call published last year.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

First global survey highlights challenges faced by young women with advanced breast cancer

2025-11-06
Lisbon, Portugal: Nearly half of all women aged younger than 40 who live with advanced breast cancer have children under the age of 18, according to the first global survey to investigate the challenges these women face. Results from the survey were presented to the Advanced Breast Cancer Eighth International Consensus Conference (ABC8) today (Thursday). [1] Jennifer Merschdorf, chief executive officer of Young Survival Coalition, which conducted the Project 528 survey, told the conference: “We launched Project 528 to fill a critical gap – the voices of young adults living with advanced breast cancer are often under-represented in clinical discussions and policy dialogues. “For ...

Advanced breast cancer patients living longer thanks to improvements in treatment and care

2025-11-06
Lisbon, Portugal: People diagnosed with advanced breast cancer in 2025 can expect to live for an extra six or seven months, compared to the average survival time for patients diagnosed in 2011, according to a major study of patient data in the US presented at the Advanced Breast Cancer Eighth International Consensus Conference (ABC8). [1]   For some types of advanced breast cancer, the average improvement in survival is ten months or more; however, the data also show a smaller increase in survival for so-called ...

Landmark Global Decade Report reveals breakthroughs in advanced breast cancer but exposes a widening global equity gap

2025-11-06
Lisbon, Portugal: The ABC Global Alliance today launched the Advanced Breast Cancer (ABC) Global Decade Report 2015–2025 — a landmark global assessment revealing a decade of remarkable scientific progress that has transformed ABC care for some patients in some countries, while many others around the world have yet to benefit. The results expose profound and persistent inequalities that leave many patients behind. The report’s central theme, ‘Knowledge in Motion’, emphasises the urgent need to translate a decade of evidence and innovation into life-changing action for every person living ...

Island reptiles face extinction before they are even studied, warns global review

2025-11-06
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 00:01 GMT THURSDAY 6 NOVEMBER 2025 Island reptiles face extinction before they are even studied, warns global review More images available via the link in the notes section A new study led by the University of Oxford has revealed that reptiles confined to islands are facing a double jeopardy. Despite being more likely to go extinct than mainland species, they remain largely ignored by researchers compared to their mainland counterparts. Although islands make up less than 7% of the Earth’s surface, they harbour a disproportionate ...

Universe's expansion 'is now slowing, not speeding up'

2025-11-06
Universe's expansion 'is now slowing, not speeding up' Royal Astronomical Society press release RAS PR 25/42 Embargoed until 00:01 GMT on Thursday 6 November The universe's expansion may actually have started to slow rather than accelerating at an ever-increasing rate as previously thought, a new study suggests. "Remarkable" findings published today in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society cast doubt on the long-standing theory that a mysterious force known as 'dark energy' is driving distant galaxies away increasingly faster. Instead, they show no evidence ...

Nation topped goal of ‘one million more’ STEM graduates over the past decade

2025-11-05
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. – With this Saturday marking the national and international day of observance for STEM and STEAM, a fair question to ask is if the United States is producing enough college graduates with degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics to maintain its leadership position in an increasingly competitive global arena? An analysis by a National Science Foundation fellow at the University of California, Santa Cruz, concluded that we were on the right track. The study of national higher-education data, published ...

AI can speed antibody design to thwart novel viruses: study

2025-11-05
Artificial intelligence (AI) and “protein language” models can speed the design of monoclonal antibodies that prevent or reduce the severity of potentially life-threatening viral infections, according to a multi-institutional study led by researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.   While their report, published Nov. 4 in the journal Cell, focused on development of antibody therapeutics against existing and emerging viral threats, including RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) and avian influenza viruses, the implications of the research are much broader, said the paper’s corresponding ...

The world’s highest honor in computational physics awarded to Stefano Baroni

2025-11-05
The American Physical Society (APS) – the world’s largest organization of physicists – has awarded the 2026 Aneesur Rahman Prize for Computational Physics to Stefano Baroni, Professor of Condensed Matter Physics at the Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati (SISSA) and research associate at the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche – Istituto Officina dei Materiali (CNR–IOM). The prize is regarded as the most prestigious international recognition in the field, awarded for ...

Radiotherapy after mastectomy can be avoided, study finds

2025-11-05
Radiotherapy can be safely omitted as a treatment for many breast cancer patients who have had a mastectomy and are taking anti-cancer drugs, a study shows. An international trial found that patients with early-stage breast cancer who underwent a mastectomy – removal of the breast – had similar 10-year survival rates whether or not they received radiotherapy. Experts say the findings should help guide treatment discussions, as many patients who currently qualify for radiotherapy after mastectomy under existing guidelines may not actually need ...

Donor kidneys perform better after machine perfusion

2025-11-05
A long-term follow-up study from a consortium of six European countries, coordinated by the department of Surgery of the University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG) shows that, even 10 years after transplantation, deceased-donor kidneys performed better when they were preserved on a machine between organ retrieval and transplantation than those that underwent static cold storage before implantation. These remarkable results were published in the New England Journal of Medicine on November 6, 2025.  Machine Preservation Trial Corresponding author Cyril Moers, scientist and transplant surgeon at the UMCG, explains: “These ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Poorer heart health in middle age linked to increased dementia risk

Duckweed offers promise and caution as nature-based solution for rice paddy pollution

Medical evidence crucial in holding polluters accountable for harming health

Climate change and conflict pose a serious health threat, warn experts

Curb sales of SUVs to reduce harms to health and the environment, say experts

Greenness linked to fewer hospital stays for mental health conditions

Experts warn of wider health impact of tropical cyclones in a warming climate

Transforming UK eye health research by linking national data resources

First global survey highlights challenges faced by young women with advanced breast cancer

Advanced breast cancer patients living longer thanks to improvements in treatment and care

Landmark Global Decade Report reveals breakthroughs in advanced breast cancer but exposes a widening global equity gap

Island reptiles face extinction before they are even studied, warns global review

Universe's expansion 'is now slowing, not speeding up'

Nation topped goal of ‘one million more’ STEM graduates over the past decade

AI can speed antibody design to thwart novel viruses: study

The world’s highest honor in computational physics awarded to Stefano Baroni

Radiotherapy after mastectomy can be avoided, study finds

Donor kidneys perform better after machine perfusion

More than a hangover: Heavy drinking linked to earlier, more severe stroke

Heavy alcohol use linked to risk of brain bleed earlier in life

Study links heart attacks and late-onset epilepsy in older adults

Urban fungi show signs of thermal adaptation

How to identify and prevent fraudulent participants in health research

Parents' attachment style may be linked with risk of parental burnout, especially when associated with difficulty in understanding and identifying their emotions

Abnormal repetitive behaviors in mice are associated with oxidative stress

Double disadvantage hurts more than twice as much

Paradox of rotating turbulence finally tamed with world-class ‘hurricane-in-a-lab’

Brain pathway may fuel both aggression, self-harm

Study: Macrophage “bodyguard” disruptors could change breast cancer treatment by helping to overcome endocrine resistance

New study reveals southern ocean’s winter CO₂ outgassing underestimated by 40%

[Press-News.org] Transforming UK eye health research by linking national data resources