Siloton, the Bristol-based health technology start-up, has secured Β£860,000 to progress the commercial roll-out of its groundbreaking eye imaging chip technology, which could help address the UKβs most common cause of sight loss.
The funding package will help Siloton to further develop its Akepa optical coherence tomography (OCT) chip technology and bring a version of the device for researchers to market in 2025. Later this year, the company is aiming to deliver a world first by capturing the first chip-based OCT image of a living eye in a commercial setting β a key milestone for its future use by clinicians.
Evenlode Foundation committed further capital in the latest round alongside members of the South East Angels, the Francis Crick Institute, and other experienced angel investors. They were complemented by non-dilutive funding from an Innovate UK Biomedical Catalyst grant, taking total funding in the company to date to Β£1.7 million.
Silotonβs technology aims to make the diagnosis and monitoring of a range of treatable retinal diseases more affordable and accessible, by compressing a tabletop-worth of heavy, expensive, and fragile components onto a single chip smaller than a Β£1 coin. The technology could save the NHS over Β£1 billion annually and allow patients to monitor their condition at home, rather than having to regularly attend hospitals.
Conditions such as wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD), retinal vein occlusion, and diabetic macular oedema affect millions of people worldwide, putting them at risk of blindness. In the UK, AMD is the largest cause of sight loss, according to the Macular Society, with around 39,800 people developing wet AMD each year.