Studying microbial keratitis (infection of the cornea) through molecular characterisation of the disease and health-system mapping methodologies to enable scalable and responsible translation of public health interventions, diagnostic development and treatment strategies. Dr Beth Mills UKRI Future Leader Fellow Centre for Inflammation Research Contact details Website: Academic Profile Website: Translational Healthcare Technologies Work: +441312429180 Email: beth.mills@ed.ac.uk Group MembersAlex Kiang, PhD student (co-supervisor)Sheelagh Duncan, Research AssistantBackgroundMicrobial Keratitis (MK) - an infection of the cornea caused by invading bacteria or fungi - is a silent epidemic, disproportionately affecting low-middle income countries (LMICs), and is a major cause of blindness. Despite being a WHO priority disease area, it has not explicitly been covered by Vision2020 frameworks and as such, it has garnered little policy, research or development focus over the last 20+ years. In India alone, 1.5-2 million people experience corneal ulcer per year, predominantly affecting the rural-poor.Corneal ulcer is an "ophthalmic emergency" and the longer the delay to seek appropriate treatment, the worse the outcome. Even where gold-standard diagnostics and treatments are available, over 60% of corneal ulcer patients are still left with visual impairment across India, and >10% of patients require expensive and often unsuccessful surgical interventions such as corneal transplant. These permanent, debilitating outcomes are often attributed to an excessive and uncontrolled inflammatory response, leading to scarring and corneal perforation. Furthermore, these bleak statistics are for the minority of patients who are able to access specialist care in large cities. The rural-poor are, in reality, much worse off. A radical re-development of the entire healthcare pathway, from diagnosis to treatment, is required to improve the prognosis for these patientsResearch ThemeTranslational medicineResearch OverviewThe overarching aim of our work is towards reducing needless blindness attributed to microbial keratitis (corneal ulcer). The approach is two-fold, exploring both bottom-up (molecular characterisation of the disease pathways) and top-down (health-system and patient care pathway mapping) methodologies to drive fundamental insight into the disease, and enable rapid, appropriate translation of public health interventions, and diagnostic development within the Indian context. This work is conducted in close collaboration with the Aravind Eye Care System (AECS), and the Aravind Medical Research Foundation (AMRF), India. Image Biographical ProfileBeth graduated from the University of Sheffield with a 1st class degree in Medical Microbiology and was awarded her PhD in Molecular Microbiology from the University of Nottingham. She subsequently joined the Proteus project and Translational Healthcare Technologies group at the University of Edinburgh in 2015, where she led infection model development and the validation of optical SmartProbes and imaging devices for clinical translation in pulmonology. More recently Beth has been exploring how such technologies can be adapted for point-of-care diagnosis of infection, considering technological, user and health system requirements in low-resource settings. Beth completed an MSc in Global Health Policy in 2019 at the University of Edinburgh, and has built extensive networks across healthcare settings in India with whom she collaborates to co-design and evaluate these technologies, particularly in the field of microbial keratitis. Beth was awarded a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship in 2021 to develop pathways to diagnose, treat and reduce the burden of microbial keratitis in India, with project partner Aravind Eye Care System. Public Engagement Our Health Global, University of Edinburgh Research lead - 2019 to presentAMR DxC (Antimicrobial Resistance Diagnostics Challenge) training schools, Mentor - 2017-2018Edinburgh International Book Festival - 2017Edinburgh Science Festival - 2015-2016Nesta: Promoting the Longitude Explorer Prize competition at Derby Big Bang Science Fair - 2014Ignite Futures! - 2012-2014CollaboratorsExternal: Dr V Prajna, Aravind Eye Care SystemAurolabsAravind Medical Research Foundation (AMRF)Professor Rachel Williams, Institute of Life Course and Medical Sciences, University of LiverpoolDr Satadal Saha, JSV Innovations, IndiaDr Naing Latt Tint, Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon, Alexandra Eye Pavilion, EdinburghInternal: Professor Kev Dhaliwal, THT, CIRProfessor Marc Vendrell, CIRProfessor Adriano Rossi, CIRDr Helen Stagg, Usher InstituteEdinOmics Go to the Edinburgh Research Explorer FundingUKRI Future Leaders FellowshipEPSRCInformation on funding at Beth Mill's Research Explorer profile. This article was published on 2024-09-10