Glaucoma treatment pioneer feted

Retired University of Otago professor Anthony Molteno (77) at  his Signal Hill home yesterday....
Retired University of Otago professor Anthony Molteno (77) at his Signal Hill home yesterday. Photo by Gregor Richardson.
A Dunedin professor who invented the first drainage device for glaucoma has been honoured at a function at the Otago Museum.

Dunedin School of Medicine research fellow Tui Bevin said 85 former students, registrars and colleagues of Prof Anthony Molteno travelled from across New Zealand and Australia to share stories at a glaucoma symposium and dinner to honour the ''delightful, colourful raconteur'' on Saturday.

''There were a lot of stories to tell,'' Mrs Bevin said.

Prof Molteno said the symposium was ''great fun and very nice''.

''It was a pleasure to see all my colleagues and the people who trained with me and we had a great time.''

Mrs Bevin said Prof Molteno earned an international reputation for his research, most notably into the effects of the Molteno implant, the first successful glaucoma drainage device and one still considered to be the ''gold standard''.

He established and directs the Otago Glaucoma Surgery Outcome Study, the world's longest ongoing follow-up study into glaucoma surgery.

It followed more than 1000 eyes with a Molteno implant, and more than 1000 eyes that had a trabeculectomy, at Dunedin Hospital since 1977 to determine their long-term outcomes.

Prof Molteno published nearly 100 articles and seven book chapters.

His work received numerous international and national honours and awards, including the American Glaucoma Society's innovator of the year award in 2015; the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery's medal for outstanding achievement in 2014; Emeritus Membership of the Glaucoma Research Society in 2011; the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Ophthalmologists' distinguished service award in 2009; the Lion Clubs International Foundation's Melvin Jones Fellowship in 2008; he became an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2006 New Year's Honours; and received the Goldmann Medal from the International Glaucoma Association in 1998 for his significant contribution to the understanding and treatment of glaucoma.

Prof Molteno and his wife, Tess, have three children.

 


Prof Anthony Molteno

• Graduated in medicine from Cape Town University in 1961.

• Specialised in ophthalmology, receiving his Edinburgh Fellowship in 1968.

• Took up an ophthalmologist position at Karl Bremmer Hospital and Tygerberg Hospital, at Stellenbosch University, near Cape Town.

• Moved to Dunedin in 1977 and appointed senior lecturer in ophthalmology at the University of Otago.

• Became professor in 2002 and emeritus professor in 2012.

• Retired from clinical and teaching work at the end of last year, but continues his research.


 

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