2023 University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center Annual Report

Page 3

Kellogg leadership team

From the Interim Chair After marking 150 years of ophthalmology at the University of Michigan last year, the Kellogg Eye Center has kicked off our second sesquicentennial with another year of amazing achievements. If there’s a common theme to our 2023 report, it’s the power of teamwork. Within our center, across the University and around the globe, our faculty have cemented longstanding partnerships and forged new, sometimes surprising ones to tackle the most vexing clinical and research questions, and to prepare the next generation of leaders in ophthalmology and vision science. From the rarest inherited retinal dystrophies to the most severe ocular surface injuries, when presented with complex clinical challenges, team care is the standard of care at Kellogg. One example shared here is a baby who, at less than 12 hours old, was rushed to U-M with acute ophthalmic and systemic issues. Kellogg specialists in pediatric ophthalmology, genetics, retina, glaucoma and cornea came together to diagnose her rare genetic syndrome and perform the surgeries that will give her the best possible chance at vision. This year’s research highlights include the renewal of four major institutional grants, the recruitment of new faculty, and the opening of our new image-guided medical robotics lab —all evidence that Kellogg is essentially built for team science. With the resources and support only available at a top academic eye center, our investigators initiated numerous novel projects in 2023, in partnership with experts in data analytics, artificial

intelligence, gene sequencing bioengineering, psychiatry and more. In Kellogg’s model of ophthalmic education, teamwork is taught by example. Students, residents and fellows are encouraged to collaborate in pursuit of their own unique areas of interest. That approach resulted in a remarkably diverse group of learners in 2023, including a medical student helping with a vision clinic expansion in Kenya, and a resident who contributed to a textbook devoted to spaceflight-associated neuroocular syndrome, a condition which, as the name implies, is exclusive to astronauts. I joined the Kellogg faculty in 2002, and not a day has passed since that I haven’t marveled at the compassion, talent and collegiality that fuel this amazing place. As a national search for our next leader continues, it is my honor to serve as Interim Chair.

Shahzad I. Mian, M.D. Interim Chair and Professor, University of Michigan Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences

Dr. Lee Assumes Expanded Role at Michigan Medicine The spirit of teamwork that drives Kellogg was driven by Emeritus Chair Paul Lee, M.D., J.D. Dr. Lee captained the Kellogg team from 2012 to 2022. In his new role as Senior Associate Dean of Clinical Affairs in the U-M Medical School and Executive Director of the U-M Medical Group, his talent and vision are now shaping the delivery of clinical care across all of University of Michigan Health. 1


Articles inside

Partnership between U-M Med School, Business School, and the Kellogg Eye Center Drives Latest Kenya

4min
pages 38-39

The Edna H. Perkiss Research Professorship in Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences

3min
page 37

Honoring the Visionary Leadership of Paul P. Lee, M.D., J.D.

3min
page 36

The Alan Sugar, M.D., Research Professorship in Ophthalmology

3min
page 35

Mark W. Johnson, M.D., Honored with Heed-Gutman Award

2min
page 34

Protecting Retinal Neurons from Diabetes

2min
page 34

Mining Big Data for Novel Glaucoma Genes

3min
page 33

Beyond the Electronic Health Record

5min
pages 32-33

Applauding a Good Catch

2min
page 31

Microneedles for Sustained Retinal Drug Delivery

2min
page 30

Alumni Highlights

4min
pages 29-30

Lecture in Professionalism and Ethics

1min
page 29

Molecular Imaging of Macular Degeneration

2min
page 28

Institutional Grants Anchor Research Infrastructure, Training

5min
pages 26-27

2023-2024 Heed Fellows

5min
pages 24-25

Pre-Med Awarded NIH Research Supplement

2min
page 23

Kellogg PGY4 Sole Resident on ACGME Residency Program Review Committee

2min
page 22

Kellogg Post-Doc Receives Prestigious NIH Grant

2min
page 21

An Out-of-This-World Perspective on Residency from one of Forbes’ Thirty-Under-Thirty

3min
page 20

Expanding Personalized Treatment and Clinical Research in Uveitis

3min
page 19

KCRC Assists in Michigan Medicine Research with Consequences for Eyes

3min
page 18

Editing Genes to Treat Corneal Dystrophies

3min
page 17

Using Artificial Intelligence to Improve IOL Formulas

3min
page 16

Selfless Service Beyond Kellogg’s Walls

1min
page 15

The Genes That Drive Eye Size

2min
page 15

Image-Guided Medical Robotics Comes to Kellogg

3min
page 14

How Inflammation Triggers Photoreceptor Regeneration

2min
page 13

The Molecular Physiology of the Blood-Retinal Barrier

3min
page 12

Prioritizing Patient Wellness—and Our Own

3min
page 11

Michigan's 15th President Joins the Department

3min
page 10

Patent Issued for Photo-Mediated Ultrasound Therapy

1min
page 9

Unlocking the Therapeutic Potential of Tears

2min
page 9

Oculoplastics: Building on an Extraordinary Legacy

3min
page 8

Assessing Age-Related Vision Impairment

3min
page 7

For IRD Patients, Tailored Interventions Address Impaired Vision and Related Distress

3min
page 6

A Rare Syndrome, A Team Approach

4min
pages 4-5

2023 University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center Annual Report

3min
page 3
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