×

Spanish researchers develop low-cost artificial cornea from fish scales

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 6:48 AM

MADRID, March 10 (Reuters) – Researchers at Spain’s University of Granada have developed an artificial cornea made from the scales of several fish species commonly ​found in markets, which could become a ‌lower-cost alternative to donor transplants for severe eye diseases.

The cornea – the eye’s transparent front layer – is difficult to repair when badly damaged because it has no blood vessels and limited regenerative capacity. ‌Severe ​corneal disease is often treated with ⁠donor transplants, which can ⁠be constrained by organ availability and waiting lists.

Scientists from the university’s Tissue Engineering Group and the ibs.GRANADA biomedical research institute said in a press release ​they had created corneal implants with fish scales that were highly biocompatible, transparent and resistant.

“Due to its ⁠origin, this product is very ⁠accessible, easy to obtain and inexpensive, and ​could help boost the local fishing industry,” said Ingrid Garzon, ​professor of histology at the southern Spanish university, ‌who co-authored the research.

While testing suggested they could be useful for corneal repair and regeneration, the technology remains far from possible clinical use in humans pending human ⁠trials.

The team said the material produced good functional results in laboratory studies and in animals that received the implants.

“Although the ⁠standard transplant usually ‌offers good results, it’s necessary to ⁠develop new effective regeneration methods that do ​not ‌depend on organ donation, which is subject ​to waiting ⁠lists,” Miguel Alaminos, also a histology professor at the same university, said in the release.

A 2016 peer-reviewed paper by researchers at Antwerp University found that fish scale-derived artificial corneas were biocompatible with humans.

(Reporting by David Latona; Editing ​by Sharon Singleton)