Optical Prism - January 2026

The

Future

is Now

AI and robotics

elevate eye surgery with

precision and safety.

PANTONE COLOUR

OF THE YEAR

Cloud Dancer brings

serene, soft white tones

to eyewear’s new year.

SOUND OF

THE GAME

Blind Hockey’s

Clever Use

of Sound.

ART YOU WEAR

Sculptural eyewear

designed with

artful intention.

Innovation

in SIGHT

Explore the AI tools transforming patient care and

operations for a smarter, more efficient practice.

JANUARY 2026 • VOL. 44 • NO. 1

Learn more at careers.fyidoctors.com

YOUR FUTURE IN EYE CARE STARTS HERE

Join Canada’s Largest

Doctor-Led & Professionally

Managed Eye Care Network.

Gold Standard

J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6 | O P T I C A L P R I S M 3

C O N T E N T S

January 2026

26

22

16

28

features

16 STYLE EYES

Sculpted Style

By Suzanne Lacorte

18 FEATURE

The AI-Ready Clinic:

How Canadian practices

are using AI today

By David Goldberg

26 PANTONE COLOUR

OF THE YEAR

Dancing through White

By Suzanne Lacorte

PANTONE

PANTONE

®

11-4201 TCX

Cloud Dancer

4 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

JANUARY 2026 • VOL. 44 • NO. 1

Publisher/Editor-in-Chief

Suzanne Lacorte 289.678.1523 x 1

slacorte@opticalprism.ca

Associate Publisher

Nick Samson 289.678.1523 x 2

nsamson@opticalprism.ca

Advertising Sales

Kathleen Irish 289.678.1523 x 5

kirish@opticalprism.ca

Copy Editor/Translator

Lamia Ghezal

lamia.ghezal@opticalprism.ca

Feature Writers

David Goldberg

dgoldberg@opticalprism.ca

Evra Taylor

evra.taylor@opticalprism.ca

Art Director

Cathryn Haynes

cat.haynes@opticalprism.ca

Digital Content Manager

Samantha Budd

sbudd@opticalprism.ca

Contributors

Robert Dalton, Dr. Fallon Patel,

Ashley Pfeifer, Dr. Allison Scott

Optical Prism (ISSN 0824-3441) is published

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rights reserved. Reproduction of any article,

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columns

22 OPTICAL INSIGHTS

The Future Realized:

AI and robotics are reshaping

today’s eye surgery

By Evra Taylor

24 OUTLOOK

AI Meets Optometry

By Dr. Allison Scott

28 SUCCESS STORY

Specsavers’ 250-store

milestone

By Evra Taylor

32 OPTICIAN VISION

Blind Hockey’s Clever

Use of Sound

By Robert Dalton

34 VIEWPOINTS

Aligning Your Business

with Your Life’s Mission

By Ashley Pfeifer

36 EXPERT EYE

Build Your Dream

Optical Team

By Dr. Fallon Patel

on the cover

The

Future

is Now

AI and robotics

elevate eye surgery with

precision and safety.

PANTONE COLOUR

OF THE YEAR

Cloud Dancer brings

serene, soft white tones

to eyewear’s new year.

SOUND OF

THE GAME

Blind Hockey's

Clever Use

of Sound.

ART YOU WEAR

Sculptural eyewear

designed with

artful intention.

Innovation

in SIGHT

Explore the AI tools transforming patient care and

operations for a smarter, more efficient practice.

JANUARY 2026 • VOL. 44 • NO. 1

COVER: AdobeStock

30

36

C O N T E N T S

departments

6

EDITOR’S LETTER

8

FRESH LOOKS

30 EYEWEAR ASTROLOGY

38 LAST GLANCE

next issue

› Love at First Sight: The Emotional

Science behind Seeing

› Frames that make you blush

OLIVE SS2060

Drawing inspiration from our signature aesthetic with a touch of 70s flair, our sunwear

evokes the luminous hues of the Ionian Sea and the raw allure of crystalline patterns,

designed for the endlessly curious.

This collection embraces bold silhouettes, rich colour palettes, and premium materials,

all crafted with meticulous attention to detail, embodying individuality and confidence.

With Sunday Somewhere Sun, the next golden hour is always ahead.

| www.westgroupe.com | 1-800-361-6220

6 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

E D I T O R ’ S L E T T E R

Future,

Meet Now

SUZANNE LACORTE

Publisher/Editor-in-Chief

I

don’t know about you, but every January feels like opening your

laptop to a fresh avalanche of possibility. New ideas, new tech,

new ambitions, everything seems to leap forward at once, eager

to redefine what the year ahead could look like. And if there’s one

force coming in especially strong for 2026, it’s AI.

Across Canada, ECPs are discovering that AI isn’t the sci-fi sidekick we

once imagined. It’s more like the ultra-organized colleague we all wish we

had, the one who colour-codes spreadsheets, never forgets a task and some-

how interprets an OCT scan faster than we can finish our morning coffee.

David Goldberg captures this beautifully in our feature story. He spoke

with practitioners who are launching new services in hours instead of

weeks, tightening workflows and giving their teams more time for the part

of the job they actually love: caring for people. It’s inspiring to see how

quickly AI has gone from “interesting idea” to “can’t live without it.”

Meanwhile, in Optical Insights, Evra Taylor explores how AI and robotics

are raising the bar in eye surgery. Think fewer complications, more

predictable outcomes and tools that give ophthalmologists a kind of

superhero-level precision. It’s fascinating and honestly, a little thrilling

to see what’s becoming possible.

And because technology doesn’t get to have all the fun, our Style Eyes

pictorial celebrates sculptural eyewear that refuses to play it safe. These

frames angle, arc and twist in ways that make everyday glasses feel like

small pieces of architecture. If eyewear could strut, these would.

We’re also taking a softer turn with Pantone’s Colour of the Year: Cloud

Dancer. It’s a gentle, luminous white that designers are already exploring

through clean palettes and minimal, modern silhouettes. Consider it the

visual equivalent of a deep breath, something we could all use in January.

This month also marks the debut of Viewpoints, our new column that

brings together Marketing4ECPs and Cleinman Performance Partners.

Each month, they’ll unpack a real practice challenge from four angles.

We’re kicking things off with Practising with Purpose, a reminder that your

business should support the life you want, not compete with it.

And finally, you’ll notice something fresh on our masthead: our new OP

logo. New year, new look, same commitment to clarity, curiosity and a little

spark of fun.

Here’s to a bright, inspired start to 2026.

“I believe we need to build

AI systems that are useful

for the clinician, for the

patient, and for the

health care system.

It’s important for us to

determine what the

bottlenecks are for

providing efficient and

high-quality care for our

patients and using AI to

address those issues.”

– DR. FARES ANTAKI,

Ophthalmologist Centre hospitalier

de l’Université de Montréal, Québec

PHOTOGRAPHY BY JESSICA WAUGH

F R E S H L O O K S

MYKITA

MYKITA introduces

the next chapter of

its LITE Acetate

collection, pairing

ultra-thin acetate

fronts with a bolder,

more sculptural design

language. New models

feature refined details,

polished finishes and

a modern, expressive

silhouette, anchored

by the introduction

of a 4 mm connector

for added structure

and visual depth. The

result is a confident

evolution that balances

architectural form with

MYKITA’s signature

lightweight comfort

and commitment to

modern craftsmanship.

For more information,

contact your Mykita

sales representative

or visit: mykita.com

Keep your eyewear options fresh with the latest

models from these leading companies

F R E S H L O O K S

GUESS

GUESS broadens its reach

with the debut of the first

GUESS JEANS Eyewear

collection, guided by Chief

New Business Development

Officer Nicolai Marciano.

Blending modern trends

with a focus on innova-

tion, the line expands the

brand’s appeal to Gen Z,

Gen Alpha and style-driven

consumers. The collection

features quality materials

in practical, easy-to-wear

designs that stay ahead

of trends. A star motif and

italic GUESS JEANS logo

reinforce its fresh, dynamic

identity, while unisex silhou-

ettes reflect the fluid tastes

of young audiences. The

result is eyewear shaped by

pop-culture influences and

the intergenerational memo-

ries that define the brand.

For more information,

contact your Marcolin

sales representative or

visit: marcolin.com

SUNDAY SOMEWHERE

Sunday Somewhere

introduces two nature-

inspired silhouettes,

Wavelite and Agate,

expanding its signature

blend of understated

luxury and 70s-infused

modernity. Wavelite

(SS1056) pairs a bold

square acetate front with

rounded lenses and sleek

titanium temples, offered

in Black, Purple Confetti,

and Blue Gradient. Agate

(SS1069) is a slim geometric

titanium frame with ripple

detailing, available in Rose

Gold, Gold Burgundy, and

Black Rose Gold, each

capturing a refined, earthy

elegance.

SILHOUETTE

Silhouette unveils The

Refined, a titanium collection

that elevates six decades of

innovation into wearable art.

Its architectural design lan-

guage—clean lines, smooth

transitions and a balance

of strength and delicacy—

highlights the brand’s mas-

tery of ultralight titanium.

Each frame offers flexibility,

durability and exceptional

comfort. Echoing Frank

Gehry’s use of titanium in

the Guggenheim Bilbao, the

The Refined

GJ00001

collection captures a similar

interplay of light, form and

movement. “Titanium is the

language through which we

express innovation,” says

Design Director Roland

Keplinger. Handcrafted in

Austria, The Refined blends

precision engineering with

luxury, showcasing titanium

at its most expressive.

For more information,

contact your Canadian

Optical Supply sales

representative or visit:

canadianoptical.com

1 0 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

F R E S H L O O K S

F R E S H L O O K S

Victoria

Alex

Riley

GÖTTI

Götti Dimension introduces KARIM

and KARINA, two refined optical

styles that explore the harmonious

interplay of materials. Each frame

pairs a 3D-printed front with delicate

stainless steel temples, creating a

look that feels light, modern and

elegantly balanced. Silkymatt surfac-

es soften even bold colour choices,

while clean lines and minimalist

detailing keep the focus on form and

function. The result is a subtle yet

confident expression of timeless

design, poised between retro influ-

ence and contemporary restraint.

For more information, contact your

Götti Switzerland sales representa-

tive or visit: gotti.ch/en

FARRAGAMO

Ferragamo Eyewear’s

Holiday 2025 collection

blends timeless elegance

with modern craftsmanship.

The standout SF333SR

sunglasses offer a refined

metal cat-eye silhouette

with gradient lenses and

sleek temples featuring the

reimagined Gancini detail.

Inspired by Ferragamo’s

leather accessories, the

jewel-like decoration rotates

to reveal a double finish of

metal and crystals. Nomi-

nated for the 2025 SILMO

d’Or, this limited-edition

style delivers luxurious

sophistication and a lumi-

nous, festive look

For more information,

contact your Marchon

sales representative or

visit: marchon.com

JONAS PAUL

Confident and kid-focused,

Jonas Paul Eyewear’s

newest collection introduc-

es eight fresh frames that

blend modern design with

all-day comfort. Light-

weight materials, flexible

spring hinges and signa-

ture comfort tips ensure

a secure, slip-free fit that

keeps up with active kids

from classroom to play-

ground. Adjustable temple

arms provide a comforta-

ble, customized fit without

pressure or pinching.

Pictured here are three

new styles from the

collection: Alex in Lemon

Blueberry Tortoise, a round

frame with bold colour;

Riley in Green Crystal Fade,

a classic rectangular shape

in a playful new hue; and

Victoria in Violet Pink Fade,

a soft cat-eye that delivers

style with confidence.

For more information, con-

tact your Jonas Paul sales

representative or visit:

luminousoptical.com

SF333SR

ferragamo.com

1 2 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

F R E S H L O O K S

PERFECT OPTICAL

Introducing model Head HD

42500, a sports sunglass

shield designed for perfor-

mance. Featuring ventilation

holes on the lens, ergo-

nomic rubber accents, and

expertly crafted temples.

Where lightness meets

cutting-edge technology.

The reptile-scale inspired

temples add a bold, unique

touch, setting this model

apart from the rest. Plus, the

innovative joints provide a

customizable fit, ensuring

maximum comfort and a

perfect fit for every wearer.

For more information,

contact your Perfect Opti-

cal sales representative or

visit: perfectoptical.com

HD42500

FLEYE

Independent eyewear is en-

tering a new era, and Eredità

Eyewear is helping shape what

comes next with the addition

of Fleye. Crafted in Denmark,

Fleye blends precision engi-

neering with quiet elegance,

offering minimalist designs

that feel refined and wearable.

United by shared values of

authenticity, innovation and

thoughtful design, Fleye and

Eredità provide ECPs with

distinctive collections that

support differentiation. The

partnership reflects a pur-

poseful approach to inde-

pendent eyewear rooted in

simplicity, individuality and

design integrity.

FACE A FACE

FACE A FACE marks its 30th

anniversary with The F Collection,

a bold evolution that blends

heritage with forward-looking

design. The new lineup amplifies

the brand’s signature freedom and

expression, mixing retro cues with

futuristic energy. “F” nods to festi-

val spirit, French craftsmanship and

the future of eyewear, with each

frame offering a fresh, expressive

horizon. Certified with Guaranteed

French Origin, these pieces deliver

unmistakable attitude—you see it,

you want it, furiously.

For more information, contact

your Design Eyewear Group

sales representative or visit:

designeyeweargroup.com

For more information, contact your

Eredità eyewear sales representative

or visit: ereditaeyewear.com

Ingrid

Bold

1 4 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

F R E S H L O O K S

1 4 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

ANDY WOLF

Andy Wolf Eyewear highlights

understated sophistication with

its Nude Frame Edit, a curated

selection of transparent and

nude-tone frames designed to

feel both subtle and distinc-

tive. Handcrafted in Austria,

each style reflects the brand’s

long-standing commitment to

quality craftsmanship while

maintaining a modern, ef-

fortless aesthetic. Made from

Acetate Renew, the frames bal-

ance sustainability with refined

design, allowing soft, neutral

tones to enhance the face

without overpowering it.

Thoughtful detailing and clean

lines blur the line between

minimal and statement-

making, offering eyewear

that feels quietly confident,

versatile and timeless.

For more information,

contact your Andy Wolf

sales representative or visit:

andy-wolf.com

laminated temple stripes;

Ted Baker TEDLuxe

TLW011 BLK, defined by

custom brow lamination,

floral prints and refined

metal detailing. Together,

the frames reflect Tura’s

commitment to expres-

sive design, thoughtful

materials and eyewear

that elevates the patient

experience.

For more information,

contact your Tura sales

representative or visit:

tura.com

SDOW034T

TLW011

Lucy

Lunette

Noah

LASH

The 2026 Lunette collection

from Lash delivers bold,

architectural styling with

wearable appeal. Crafted

in lightweight acetate, the

palette spans black, light

grey, and brown-with-black.

Key styles include Lucy—a

polished soft-square frame

with titanium detailing—and

Noah, a sleek soft octagon

crafted in titanium/

stainless steel. With a

universal fit and distinctly

modern designs, Lunette

offers opticians a refined,

fashion-forward assortment.

For more information,

visit the McCray Eyewear

Division Instagram page or

visit: mccrayoptical.com

TURA

Tura Inc., founded in 1938,

continues to build on nearly

nine decades of design lead-

ership, craftsmanship and

partnership with independ-

ent eyecare practices. Its

purposeful portfolio

balances artistry, comfort

and innovation across

fashion and specialty

collections. Featured

styles include Superdry

SDOW034T MUL, an over-

sized square frame with

bold green-and-purple

colour blocking and sporty

1 6 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

S T Y L E E Y E S

SCULPTED

STYLE

Sculpted and seriously stylish, these architectural

frames turn everyday eyewear into wearable art.

BY SUZANNE LACORTE

J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6 | O P T I C A L P R I S M 1 7

S T Y L E E Y E S

1.

2.

TIP

Style

Sculptural eyewear is your

client’s power suit, bold,

modern, and instantly

confidence-boosting.

When choosing these

frames, I always tell clients

to look for the architec-

ture: layered acetates that

add depth, mixed metals

for contrast, and clean,

intentional angles that

give the frame its sculpted

silhouette. Keep every-

thing else simple—sleek

hair, clean makeup, min-

imalist clothing—so the

artistry shines. When the

shape, fit, and personality

align, sculptural frames

don’t just sit on the face…

they shape it.

— WENDY BUCHANAN,

Eyewear Image Expert

1. Venus by Oscar Mamooi

2. Mamba by Press Eyewear

3. Lifesaver 2.0 Oval by

Morgenthal Frederics

4. The Astra – AS2 by Vysen Eyewear

5. JF2982 by J.F. Rey

6. A04501T by Alain Mikli

7. Boemian by Boem

8. Toldra by Etnia Barcelona

9. Callas by Faniel

3.

5.

4.

6.

7.

8.

9.

1 8 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

F E AT U R E

How Canadian ECPs are using artificial

intelligence to streamline diagnostics,

strengthen teams, and transform the

way modern practices operate.

The

AI-Ready

Clinic

BY DAVID GOLDBERG

J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6 | O P T I C A L P R I S M 1 9

F E AT U R E

Only 18 months ago, AI in eye care was

largely experimental, a curiosity discussed at

conferences more than deployed in clinics.

Today, practitioners across the country are

using AI for everything from interpreting

OCT scans to analyzing phone call sentiment,

from generating marketing copy to coaching

employees on performance metrics.

AI TOOLS

TRANSFORMING

Canadian Eye Care

CARE-1: This Canadian-based

tele-ophthalmology platform allows

optometrists to upload OCT scans for

expert review by ophthalmologists.

When uncertain about a scan,

practitioners can get a second opinion

without referring the patient out —

providing reassurance for both doctor

and patient. CARE-1 is also developing

standalone glaucoma AI management

capabilities through an ongoing pilot

program that builds the platform’s

training dataset while supporting

practitioners with expert consultation.

CSI Dry Eye Software: This platform

streamlines dry eye management

through intelligent automation. Patients

complete detailed symptom question-

naires before their appointments, and

the system uses those responses along

with clinical findings to auto-popu-

late personalized treatment plans.

The technology helps clinics prepare

for appointments in advance, ensures

consistent care protocols, and creates

a more personalized patient experience

from the first interaction.

Altri sAI: Designed specifically for OCT

interpretation, Altris AI provides AI-

assisted analysis that helps practition-

ers identify pathology with greater

confidence. The platform flags poten-

tial concerns — from early glaucoma

indicators to subtle retinal changes

— that might be overlooked during

high-volume clinic days. Rather than

replacing clinical judgment, tools like

Altris AI serve as a reliable second set

of eyes, helping busy practitioners

maintain diagnostic accuracy even

when seeing dozens of patients daily.

ix months. That’s how long

it might have taken Dr.

Fallon Patel to plan and

launch a new service at her

optometry practice. Now,

with AI systems woven into

daily operations, she can do it in an hour.

“We just move faster,” says Patel, who

operates five clinics in the Greater

Toronto Area. “All the planning gets

done very quickly, so we just focus on the

implementation and the behaviours.”

Her experience reflects a broader trans-

formation underway in Canadian eye

care. From diagnostic imaging to prac-

tice management, AI tools are reshaping

how optometrists work, how they train

their teams, and how they deliver care

to patients.

The new practice playbook

Across Canada, innovative practitioners

are building AI into their operations

on several fronts. Dr. Trevor Miranda,

who runs five clinics on Vancouver

Island, has gone so far as to create his

own AI assistant. Called “Rovert” — an

anagram of Trevor — the system has

been trained on Miranda’s podcasts,

articles, standard operating procedures,

and employee manuals.

“It’s so good, in fact, some of my

leadership team talk to Rovert before

they talk to me to see what I would say,”

explains Miranda. “And sometimes they

don’t talk to me because Rovert has

nailed it.”

The result is what Miranda calls an

AI agent representing him in meetings

without his direct involvement —

freeing him to focus on acquisitions,

clinical work, and strategic growth

rather than answering the same opera-

tional questions repeatedly.

Patel is using AI to build a stronger,

more self-reliant team. Instead of every

challenge landing on her desk, she’s

trained her employees to go to AI first.

“Rather than coming to me or my office

manager for every problem, I taught the

team to look for solutions,” she explains.

“Ask ChatGPT, come back with three

options, and see if you can resolve it

before bringing it forward.”

Smarter Diagnostics,

Better Referrals

On the clinical side, AI-powered

diagnostic platforms are helping optom-

etrists make more confident decisions

while reducing unnecessary referrals to

ophthalmologists — a growing concern as

Canada’s health care system strains under

the demands of an aging population.

Patel uses CARE-1, a Canadian-based

tele-ophthalmology platform that allows

practitioners to upload OCT scans for

review by ophthalmologists. When a

scan raises questions, practitioners can

get a second opinion without sending

the patient elsewhere.

“It alleviates the burden on the health-

care system because then you’re not

sending a nonsense referral,” Patel says.

2 0 O P T I C A L P R I S M | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6

F E AT U R E

“A lot of the referrals to retina specialists

could have just been monitored by the

optometrist.”

It’s hard not to feel hopeful about AI’s

potential to transform health care in Can-

ada, with growing concerns over wait times

and access to services like eye care. AI tools

that help optometrists confidently manage

conditions like glaucoma and age-related

macular degeneration (AMD) in-house —

referring only when surgical intervention

is truly needed — could prove essential for

faster wait times and an overall improved

patient experience.

“We know that baby boomers are getting

older, and there’s going to be a health care

crisis at some point,” Patel says. “Optom-

etrists have to do their part to learn how

to manage glaucoma and how to better

monitor AMD and only refer when they

need surgical intervention.”

For dry eye management, Patel has recently

implemented CSI Dry Eye Software.

Automated pre-visit questionnaires gather

detailed symptom information, allowing the

clinic to understand each patient’s needs in

advance. Based on the intake responses and

clinical findings, the AI auto-populates a

personalized treatment plan.

AI-powered administration

Forward-thinking ECPs have found a way

to leverage AI in nearly every touchpoint

of the business. Both Miranda and Patel

have developed frameworks that use AI

to train staff, monitor performance, and

streamline decision-making across their

multi-location practices.

Miranda uses AI to analyze recorded phone

calls, providing colour-coded sentiment

ratings: green for good interactions, yellow

for concerning moments, red for calls requir-

ing follow-up. The system evaluates both the

caller and the staff member, flagging mo-

ments when a front desk employee sounded

defensive or failed to offer a solution.

“We take that and then we escalate it and

ask the staff, what happened here — could

we have done better?” Miranda says. “For

training purposes, for audit purposes, for ser-

vice recovery purposes, AI can be assistive.”

He also runs job resumes through AI —

partly because applicants are now using AI

to write them. “AI can detect itself, if you

will,” he says. “It’s fascinating.”

Patel is developing her own AI-powered prac-

tice management platform. With a planned

launch of early 2026, PulseIQSolutions

combines role-based training modules with

performance tracking and virtual coaching.

The system also analyzes practice data and

tells staff what actions to take next.

“I got tired of repeating myself,” says

Patel. “I built something that covers all the

gaps: three-minute training videos, work-

books, Q&As, all tied into an AI coach.

These resources cover all the minutiae

that matters — like how to effectively

answer a phone call or how to deal with a

patient complaint.”

PulseIQSolutions also includes an employee

recognition system. When a team member

achieves a milestone, “like completing their

first ZEST treatment, they get a shout-out

that the whole team can see,” says Patel.

“It’s those little things that really get your

team to elevate.”

In 2026, Patel plans to push even further.

She’s exploring AI avatars that could answer

common staff questions in her voice and

considering whether AI-powered financial

analysis might eventually replace some

fractional CFO work. For a practice owner

directing five locations, the appeal is obvious:

more time for ensuring quality care and

growing the business.

Regulating AI in eye care

Alberta was among the first Canadian optom-

etry colleges to issue guidance documents on

AI, emphasizing transparency with patients,

informed consent, and the right to opt out

of AI-assisted care. Those guidelines were

developed by the Alberta College of Optome-

trists Standards of Practice Committee.

Dr. Kim Bugera, the college's registrar and

CEO, oversees their implementation.

“The role of the regulator right now is

providing guidance. We don’t want to stifle

innovation, and we don’t want to overregulate

this field. We want there to be an ability for

professionals to provide patients with earlier

intervention, better risk assessment and more

personalized care. But we still need to make

sure there are safeguards in place.”

Bugera adds that while ECPs need to

embrace the benefits of AI, they must also

alleviates the burden on the

health care system because

then you’re not sending a

nonsense referral. A lot of

the referrals to retina specialists could have just

been monitored by the optometrist.”

- DR. FALLON PATEL

J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6 | O P T I C A L P R I S M 2 1

F E AT U R E

F E AT U R E

hile tools like CARE-1 and

Altris AI are already de-

ployed in Canadian clinics,

another AI application is

generating significant research inter-

est: oculomics. This emerging field

uses artificial intelligence to analyze

retinal images for signs of systemic

diseases far beyond the eye itself.

The concept builds on established

medical knowledge that the retina

offers a unique window into overall

health. Research teams are training

algorithms to identify early indicators

of cardiovascular disease, diabetes,

Alzheimer’s disease, and other sys-

temic conditions — all from standard

retinal imaging. The implications are

profound: routine eye exams could

become powerful screening oppor-

tunities for diseases that typically

require blood tests, brain scans, or

specialized cardiac imaging.

Oculomics has been featured at the

Canadian Association of Optom-

etrists Leaders Forum, reflecting

growing recognition of its potential.

“AI is really going to change the

world,” says Dr. Kim Bugera.

Oculomics remains largely in the

research phase, requiring extensive

validation and regulatory approval

before clinical deployment.

PREPARING THE NEXT

GENERATION

As AI transforms practice, optom-

etry education is evolving to keep

pace. The University of Waterloo

School of Optometry and Vision

Science is implementing curriculum

changes starting in September 2026.

Among the additions: a new course

called Medical Imaging and Artificial

Intelligence in Optometry, along with

courses on glaucoma and neuro-

degenerative disease, and neuro-

ophthalmic disease management.

“Much of the content is already being

taught, but it is being reorganized

and regularly updated, especially in

an area such as AI, where things are

changing so rapidly,” says university

spokesperson Karen Kawawada.

The curriculum changes will allow

students to start learning clinical

skills sooner and benefit from

more integrated learning in areas

where optometry’s scope has

been expanding. Students will still

complete the four-year doctor of

optometry program in the same

timeframe, but with an additional

study term and more clinical

exposure built throughout.

Why

Oculomics

Matters

protect the patients and maintain trust,

making sure that the human in the room

is providing strong clinical oversight about

what the machine is doing.

“If you do any kind of measurement in

optometry, like an auto-refraction, you still

need to use your clinical judgment to say,

does this make sense,” she says. “It’s just a

different tool — treat it as a tool, not as a

piece of clinical judgment.”

Better at being human

AI’s greatest value is its potential to

empower humans to do great things,

whether that’s accelerating the discovery

of lifesaving drugs or catching a critical

concern on an OCT scan.

“I’m very optimistic about AI in the world

and all the positives that will come out of it,”

reflects Bugera. “Even though it’s changing so

fast, human beings always find a way to do the

right thing and eventually get it right.”

Miranda even envisions AI-powered

optician assistants helping patients navigate

lens choices, but only as a complement to

personal service.

“You still want the optician to go, ‘Oh,

you look amazing in those glasses,’” says

Miranda. “AI can never replace that human

connection. And as AI gets better, we need

to get better at being human.” OP

AI is transforming cataract and other

surgeries — from pre-op diagnostics to

surgical planning and post-op recovery.

According to The Cataract Institute, a net-

work of Canadian cataract surgery centres,

cataracts are the second leading cause of

blindness and vision impairment in the

world. The Institute reports that in Canada,

roughly half a million cataract surgeries are

performed annually.

AI tools have myriad applications in

ophthalmic disease diagnosis, surgery and

disease progression prediction.1

AI and robotics are reshaping today’s

eye surgery with greater precision,

safety and predictability.

The

Future

HOW OPHTHALMOLOGISTS ARE USING AI

FOR SURGICAL PRECISION

The key benefits of AI in eye surgery

include standardization and objectivity of

results, leading to more reliable outcomes

for patients and a high degree of confidence

to ECPs that cases can be approached with

greater consistency.

Fundus Image Analysis: AI algorithms

can analyze fundus images to detect and

diagnose diabetic retinopathy, age-related

macular degeneration (AMD), glaucoma,

and retinopathy of prematurity. These

algorithms can help automate the screening

process, prioritize high-risk cases, and assist

ophthalmologists in providing timely and

accurate diagnoses.

Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT): AI

algorithms can analyze OCT images to

identify and quantify structural abnormal-

ities, track disease progression and assist

in diagnosing conditions such as macular

oedema, AMD and glaucoma.

Surgical Planning and Guidance: AI

algorithms can provide analyses of preoper-

ative data and images to assist surgeons in

surgical planning. They can provide insights

into optimal incision placement and lens

selection. During surgery, AI tools can

provide real-time guidance, aiding surgeons

in performing procedures with greater

precision and accuracy.

Disease Progression Prediction: Prediction can

lead to prevention. AI models trained on

BY EVRA TAYLOR

as an aid in surgery isn’t futuristic – it’s here.

And it’s already making a measurable impact in

today’s operating rooms. AI is helping surgeons

deliver more precise outcomes, reduce complications and

improve patient satisfaction.

Realized

AI

O P T I C A L I N S I G H T S

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J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 6 | O P T I C A L P R I S M 2 3

longitudinal patient data can help predict

the progression of eye diseases such as glau-

coma and AMD. By analyzing various risk

factors, patient characteristics and clinical

data, these models can provide personalized

predictions, allowing for more proactive and

targeted interventions.

REVOLUTIONIZING

CATARACT SURGERY

Cataract surgery is the most frequently

performed operation worldwide, with more

than five million procedures annually in the

U.S. alone.2 

AI-driven cataract surgery is being ad-

vanced by companies like Horizon Surgical

Systems, which announced in October

2025 that it had completed the world’s first

cataract surgery using the Polaris platform.

Polaris is the first surgical platform built

specifically for ophthalmology. The Polaris

technology merges AI-driven visualization

with micro-robotic control. The system

aims to reduce interoperative variations to

support more predictable results than those

achieved in standard ophthalmic surgery.

Surgeons control the robot from a console,

manipulating instruments with high

-precision accuracy. The system offers per-

sonalized surgery plans and reduces human

variability. Following successful initial human

trials, Polaris is awaiting FDA approval.

A LANDMARK MILESTONE IN ROBOTICS

AND AI

“This first-in-human procedure represents

the culmination of more than a decade of

innovation and the start of Polaris’ clinical

journey,” said Dr. Jean Pierre Hubschman,

founder and CEO of Horizon. “Polaris was

designed to extend surgeons’ capabilities by

delivering greater precision while enhancing

safety and efficiency in ophthalmic surgery.

Achieving the world’s first successful robot-

ic cataract surgery is a landmark milestone

that underscores how robotics and AI can

help address some of the most pressing

challenges in global eye care.”

Dr. Fares Antaki, an ophthalmologist at

Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Mon-

tréal, stated, “I believe we need to build AI

systems that are useful for the clinician, for

the patient and for the health care system.

It’s important for us to determine what the

bottlenecks are for providing efficient and

high-quality care for our patients and using

AI to address those issues,” said Anta-

ki. In cataract surgery, he noted that AI

algorithms are already being used to help

ophthalmologists select the best power of

intraocular lens for each patient based on

their eye dimensions.

PRE-OPERATIVE PLANNING

AND DIAGNOSIS

AI’s application in personalized surgical

mapping is another road to personalizing

ophthalmic processes and procedures.

AI systems are capable of analyzing over

100,000 data points from a patient’s cornea

to create a “digital twin” or an “eye finger-

print” that guides customized laser treat-

ment plans, resulting in higher precision

and reduced side effects.

INTRAOPERATIVE ASSISTANCE

DURING SURGERY 

● Robotic Precision: AI-guided robotic

arms offer stability beyond human

capability (10-micron precision vs.

100-micron tremor), automating tasks

like grasping instruments

● Real-Time Guidance: Systems provide live

feedback, track surgical phases and ana-

lyze data, while voice-activated systems

offer immediate information

● Smart Operating Rooms: AI helps manage

instruments, track resources and inte-

grates multimodal imaging data

POST-OPERATIVE AND

FUTURE APPLICATIONS

● Predicting Complications: Forecasts risks

like IOL dislocation or posterior capsular

opacification

● Automated Follow-up: Organizes patient

care and tracks recovery

● Advanced Treatments: Helps develop

algorithms for diagnosing infections

(corneal ulcers)

Future developments may lead to rejuvena-

tion of aged eye cells to potentially reverse

cataracts. 

AI is playing an increasingly pivotal role

in the prevention and management of a

range of ocular diseases. The implemen-

tation of AI in this sector is expected to

increase treatment success while reduc-

ing disease recurrence and minimizing

post-surgical complications. OP

REFERENCES:

1 Honavar SG. Eye of the Storm: Exploring

the Impact of AI Tools in Ophthalmology.

Ind J Ophthalmol. 2023 Jun;71(6):2328-2340.

2 National Library of Medicine – Cataract

Surgery: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/

NBK559253/

Other AI surgery platforms are transform-

ing the sector through adaptive intelligence.

The ALLY Adaptive Cataract Treatment

system (LENSAR) integrates femtosec-

ond laser and phacoemulsification in one

device, using advanced imaging (augmented

reality) to guide surgical steps, customize

lens fragmentation and automate tasks. This

allows seamless transitions from femto to

phaco in a single sterile environment.

ALLY’s Cataract Density Imaging uses big

data to automatically analyze and catego-

rize cataract density. This allows the device

to customize a fragmentation pattern by

leveraging AI to pinpoint the location of

the nucleus and lens layers.

In laser surgery, AI-enhanced tools like to-

pography-guided custom ablation treat-

ment (TCAT) deliver customized vision

correction plans to fit the unique charac-

teristics of each patient’s eyes. According to

Toronto-based LASIK MD, AI isn’t slated

to replace LASIK surgeons. Rather, it’s

making them more effective.

“The key benefits

of AI in eye

surgery include

standardization

and objectivity

of results, leading

to more reliable

outcomes for

patients.”

O P T I C A L I N S I G H T S