Tomey Data Transfer Software Updated 〈Original - 2025〉

Using the CASIA 2 for anterior chamber angle analysis? The updated software allows you to export angle opening distance (AOD) measurements directly into your progression report, overlaying them with OCT RNFL data from other vendors.

In a busy ophthalmology or optometry practice, the connection between diagnostic hardware and the medical record system is the backbone of patient flow. Previously, software incompatibilities could lead to "bottlenecks" where staff had to manually scan or input data.

By updating the TOMEY data transfer software, practices can expect: tomey data transfer software updated

Tomey has rolled out three major pillars of improvement in this update. If your clinic is still running a version prior to 4.7, you are missing out on critical efficiency gains.

“We have three Tomey topographers and two AL-4000s. Before the update, data transfer was a manual drag-and-drop nightmare. With the new bi-directional sync, our techs save roughly 15 minutes per day. That adds up to over 60 hours a year reclaimed for patient care.”
— Dr. Sarah Lin, Lin Eye Associates, Chicago Using the CASIA 2 for anterior chamber angle analysis

“The DICOM support is what sold us. Our hospital IT security refused to allow the old software because it stored unencrypted XML locally. Now it’s fully encrypted with AES-256. The audit trail feature alone is worth the upgrade.”
— Mark Tolland, IT Director, Pacific Cataract & Laser Institute

Imagine a patient, "Mr. Jones," arrives for a cataract pre-op. The old workflow took 90 seconds per eye for data transfer. The updated workflow takes 12 seconds. “We have three Tomey topographers and two AL-4000s

For post-LASIK ectasia screening, the Tomey topographer’s symmetry maps can now be embedded directly into the surgical consent form PDF via the EMR bridge. This creates a legal, time-stamped record that the patient’s irregularity was flagged pre-op.

For years, clinics using Tomey instruments (such as the Tomey OA-2000, Tomey AL-4000, Tomey CASIA 2, or RT-7000) relied on generic file exports or manual data entry. The old iterations of the Tomey Data Transfer Software worked, but they often required clunky workarounds, lacked support for modern Windows security protocols, and struggled with structured query language (SQL) integration for major EMRs like Epic, Medisoft, or RevolutionEHR.

The updated software addresses three core pain points:

File corruption during transfer was a silent productivity killer. The new build includes a checksum verification protocol.