Pr Eric E. GabisonOphthalmology · Cornea & refractive · Paris
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HomeCoursesCorneal transplantation › Keratoprostheses & greffe limbique
Course contents ▾
  1. Evolution & paradigm
  2. Applied anatomy
  3. Epidemiology 2026
  4. Taxonomy
  5. Tissue banks
  6. Immunology & rejection
  7. Penetrating KP
  8. Anterior lamellar
  9. Endothelial
  10. Regenerative turn
  11. Keratoprostheses
  12. Surface & limbus
  13. Complications & follow-up
  14. Special situations
  15. Perspectives & synthesis
Chapter 11

Keratoprostheses, artificial cornea & artificial endothelium

When tissue grafting is doomed to fail — repeat failures, deeply vascularised cornea, dry or keratinised surface, severe bilateral limbal deficiency — the corneal prosthesis offers rehabilitation where nothing else works.

Main keratoprostheses
DeviceConceptIndications
Boston KPro type 1PMMA optic + back plate, mounted on a carrier graft; wet-surface eyeMultiple graft failures, relatively preserved surface
Boston KPro type 2Trans-palpebral variant for a severely diseased surfaceExtreme dryness, keratinisation
CorNeat KProSynthetic prosthesis bio-integrated into the sclera via a non-degradable matrix (tissue colonisation)A less tissue-dependent alternative; 1st implantation in France and in Europe in 2021 (Pr E. Gabison)
OOKP (osteo-odonto-KPro)Autologous tooth/bone support carrying an optical cylinderEnd-stage cicatricial dry eye (Stevens-Johnson, burns) — last resort

▶ Watch the CorNeat KPro and artificial cornea on video (egabison.com)

The price of this rehabilitation is lifelong surveillance: retroprosthetic membrane, glaucoma (often the main long-term visual threat), extrusion/melt of the carrier graft, and above all the risk of endophthalmitis. Selection, close follow-up and adherence (bandage contact lens, antibiotic prophylaxis) are inseparable from the indication.

2026 marker

Synthetic bio-integrated prostheses aim to reduce dependence on donor tissue and to improve long-term retention through cellular colonisation of the material — a convergence of prosthetics and tissue engineering.

EndoArt® — the artificial endothelium (synthetic device)

For a long time, "artificial cornea" meant replacing the optical axis (keratoprosthesis). EndoArt® (EyeYon Medical) transposes this synthetic logic to the posterior layer: it is an artificial endothelial implant, a thin flexible lens of hydrophilic acrylic apposed to the posterior surface of the cornea. It does not replace the endothelial pump but acts as a mechanical barrier preventing aqueous humour from soaking the stroma, reducing oedema — with no donor tissue at all.

Niche indication: symptomatic chronic corneal oedema in patients with low visual potential, after repeated endothelial graft failures, or when donor tissue is lacking. CE-marked; positioned with a gas bubble, repositionable.

EndoArt® — advantages and limitations
AdvantagesLimitations / drawbacks
No donor tissue: free of scarcity and immunological rejectionMechanical barrier only: does not restore endothelial pump function
Available "off the shelf", standardised and repositionable implantReserved for selected cases (often limited visual potential)
An option when endothelial grafting has failed or is impossibleRequires good apposition/fixation; risk of decentration or dislocation
Minimally invasive and reversible procedureLong-term follow-up still limited
First in France

The first EndoArt® implantation in France was performed by Pr E. Gabison and Pr B. Cochener.

Chapter 12

Surface reconstruction & limbal grafting

A keratoplasty only succeeds on a healthy epithelial surface. In limbal stem cell deficiency (chemical burns, aniridia, Stevens-Johnson, iatrogenic causes), the corneal epithelium can no longer renew itself: conjunctivalisation, neovascularisation, opacification. Restoring the limbal reservoir is then a prerequisite for any stromal graft.

Limbal / surface reconstruction options
TechniqueSourceSituation
CLAU / conjunctivo-limbal autograftHealthy fellow eye (autologous)Unilateral involvement
CLET (Holoclar®)Autologous cultured limbal stem cellsUnilateral deficiency; 1st stem-cell therapy medicine authorised in Europe (EMA)
SLETSimple limbal epithelial transplantation (small autologous fragment placed on amniotic membrane)Low-cost, single-stage alternative
KLAL / lr-CLALAllograft (cadaveric or living related donor)Bilateral involvement — under immunosuppression
Amniotic membraneHealing / anti-inflammatory scaffoldFrequent adjunct

▶ Watch a report on ocular surface reconstruction (egabison.com)

Pitfall — the order of procedures

Grafting the stroma onto a surface with limbal deficiency is programming failure: persistent epithelial defect, neovascularisation, rejection. Reconstruct the surface first, graft afterwards.