Eye Banks

Eye Banks in Italy
There are 12 Eye Banks in Italy, operating throughout the national territory. They collect and preserve donated ocular tissues, ensure their quality and safety, and coordinate their distribution to transplant centers. They also promote donation and support scientific research. Some Italian Eye Banks also prepare and distribute amniotic membrane.

Eye Banks operate within the framework of the National Transplant Centre, in coordination with Interregional and Regional Transplant Centres. Thanks to the exemplary generosity and donation awareness of Italian citizens, and to the outstanding work carried out in collecting, screening, preserving, and distributing ocular tissues, the Eye Bank network consistently meets the national demand for transplant tissues.
LOCATIONS
Click on the map to find our branches across the different regions!
All contacts:
Bologna
Banca delle Cornee dell’Emilia Romagna
Ospedale Maggiore
Via dell’Ospedale, 8
40133 Bologna (BO)
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Cosenza
Centro Riferimento Regionale per gli innesti corneali “L. Barca”
Az. Ospedaliera di Cosenza
P.O. SS. Annunziata
Via F. Migliori, 1
87100 Cosenza (CS)
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Fabriano
Banca degli Occhi della Regione Marche
Ospedale “E.Profili”
V.le Stelluti Scala, 26
60044 Fabriano (AN)
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Genova
Fondazione Banca degli Occhi Lions Melvin Jones
Ospedale Policlinico San Martino
Padiglione 10 - 1° piano
Largo Rosanna Benzi, 10
16132 Genova (GE)
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L’Aquila
Banca degli Occhi dell’Aquila
Crr per le donazioni e i trapianti di cornea regioni Abruzzo e Molise
Ospedale San Salvatore
Edificio 2 – Ingresso C
67010 Loc. Coppito - L’Aquila
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Lucca
Banca degli Occhi di Lucca
Centro Conservazione Cornee Piero Perelli
Az. USL Toscana nord ovest
Ospedale San Luca - II° piano - percorso rosso - lato A
Via Guglielmo Lippi Francesconi 1763
55100 Lucca (LU)
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Monza
Banca degli Occhi di Monza
IRCCS Fondazione San Gerardo Dei Tintori
Via Pergolesi, 33
20900 Monza (MB)
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Napoli
Banca delle Cornee di Napoli
Ospedale dei Pellegrini
Via Portamedina alla Pignasecca, 41
80134 Napoli (NA)
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Pavia
Banca degli Occhi di Pavia “Fernando Trimarchi”
Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico S. Matteo
P.le Golgi, 2 – Padiglione 6
27100 Pavia (PV)
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Roma
Banca degli Occhi di Roma
Az. Ospedaliera San Giovanni – Addolorata
Via San Giovanni in Laterano, 155
00184 Roma (RM)
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Torino
Banca delle Cornee
Azienda Ospedaliero Universitaria Città della Salute e della Scienza di Torino - ASO S. Giovanni Battista
Corso Bramante 88/90
10126 Torino (TO)
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Venezia
Fondazione Banca degli Occhi del Veneto ETS
Padiglione Rama
Via Paccagnella, 11
30174 Venezia (VE)
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The Eye Bank: collecting, screening, and distributing tissues for transplantation

The Eye Bank was established with the purpose of collecting, screening, preserving, and distributing — with the highest standards of quality and safety — corneas, other ocular tissues, and amniotic membranes for elective surgery or urgent ophthalmic procedures.

The Cornea Procurement and Transplantation Network (as with all transplant tissues) in Italy is regulated by Article 15 of Law 91/1999. In accordance with this legislation, regional Eye Banks have been established throughout the national territory.

Eye Banking Activities

Eye Banking activities begin with donor selection, which is carried out according to specific inclusion and exclusion criteria, standardized nationwide to ensure transplant safety.
At the Eye Bank, ocular tissues are evaluated in controlled-contamination environments (laminar flow cabinets in filtered-air rooms) to assess their morphological and functional characteristics, and are then preserved in specific storage solutions at controlled temperatures.
Corneal tissues may be stored either cold (4°C) or warm (31°C). During warm storage and prior to the distribution of all tissues, microbiological culture tests are performed to rule out any potential contamination.
Amniotic membrane is prepared from placentas obtained during caesarean sections and stored at the Eye Bank at -80°C or in liquid nitrogen. Upon specific request, the tissue is typically thawed and shipped to the requesting centre.

The Eye Bank in Support of Corneal Surgery

In many cases, the tissue is not only certified and preserved, but also prepared according to the specific requirements of the surgeons who will use it. This occurs when lamellar corneal transplant surgery is to be performed.
In cases of anterior lamellar keratoplasty, the Eye Bank can prepare anterior corneal stromal lamellae of varying thickness and diameter as requested, using a microkeratome. For endothelial keratoplasties, surgeons may request tissue suitable for penetrating keratoplasty and then prepare the required tissue themselves in the operating room at the time of surgery, or they may request from the Eye Bank a tissue with specific characteristics tailored to the planned procedure.
In the latter case, Eye Bank staff can pre-cut a lenticule for DSAEK (consisting of deep stroma, Descemet's membrane, and endothelium) using a microkeratome, or prepare tissue for DMEK (consisting solely of Descemet's membrane and endothelium).
Any manipulation performed by the surgeon on tissue supplied by the Eye Bank must take place intraoperatively. Eye Banking activities are in fact only permitted within the Eye Bank itself.

A Certified System to Ensure Tissue Quality and Safety

All tissue banks in Italy are established by the Regional Authorities and certified by the National Transplant Centre for the conduct of their activities.
Within the Eye Bank, all stages of Eye Banking — from acceptance, evaluation, preparation, and certification through to tissue distribution — are carried out in compliance with continuously updated internal procedures.
The National Transplant Centre has developed a quality monitoring and control system for tissue bank activities, which includes regular inspections conducted every two years. Only banks that meet the requirements set out in EU Directive 23/2004 and Legislative Decree 191/2007 are certified as eligible to operate on the national territory. The fundamental purpose of the directive is to ensure the quality and safety of tissues, thereby minimising the risk of disease transmission through transplantation.