- The latest on AOA contact lens advocacy
- Warby Parker slapped with $1.5 million penalty for HIPAA breach
- How AOA advocacy keeps contact lens wearers fright free
- Contacts Lens Prescription Modernization Act introduced as next step in ending damaging robocalls
- Health system optometrists strike for recognition, fair labor practices
- How AOA is keeping contact lens wearers safe this spooky season
- Constant presence: Alliance builds reputation for patient safety advocacy
- Hubble Contacts concerns grow after woman loses eye, AOA asks where’s enforcement?
- AOA Today Show Response
- AOA recommends care standard for telemedicine use amid rapid change
- AOA issues consumer health alert for online vision tests
- AOA's 31 in 31 campaign
- Vision Direct website removes FCLCA claims after AOA and BBB challenge
- Goal should be mandatory protective eyewear in high school field hockey
- Mere commoditization
- AOA pushes Amazon to sufficiently address inappropriate contact lens sales
- Vision Direct UK to halt sales without required prescriptions after AOA complaints
- Alcon joins Health Care Alliance for Patient Safety
- Patients need guidance on risks of online vision apps
- AOA demands 1-800 Contacts change misleading message
- Telemedicine-Policy
- Breaking through the pandemic
- VA rescinds laser policy
- AOA rallies optometry and allies to fight FTC contact lens rule
- Company recalls colored contact lenses it was selling online without FDA clearance
- FTC Contact Lens Rule changes
- ftc flags vision apps misleading claims
- atlantic author retracts tweet
- Homeland Security agents bust counterfeit contact lens dealers
- 1800 online eye test
- FDA enforcement action disrupts vision test company
- AOA AFOS continue fight against VA experimental eye exam replacement program
- Amazon drops noncompliant contact lens sellers
- Can you hear me now?
- AOA rejects demand from Stanton Optical to retract article
- AOA urges Federal Trade Commission to investigate Visibly ExpressExam
- FTC finds 1-800 Contacts engaged in anticompetitive agreements
- Opternatives doctor locator draws questions
- FDA warning to Opternative
- Illegal contact lens retailers slapped with fines penalties
- FDA Warning to Opternative March 18
- Holding accountable errant eye care retailers
- Hubble update
- AOA continues the fight for patient safety
- Veterans Round Table
- Balancing patient health safety with technological progress
- AOAs eye health first stance lays bare convenience messaging
- AOA contributes to CDC vision initiative
- States and AOA persevere in fight against heightened opposition from Opternative 1800Contacts
- AOA scrutiny aims to hold device profiteers accountable for false claims
- AOA promotes patient safety protections
- AOA Congress urge VA to uphold promise
- Legislation targets prescription verification deceptive internet sales tactics
- GMA Investigates raises red flag on Opternative
- Preventable vision loss unacceptable
- AOA commends FTC action against 1-800 Contacts
- AOA files expansive FDA complaint against Opternative
- Opternative issued cease and desist order
- AOA officers and CDC officials make plans for more collaboration
- Alliance for Patient Safety
- VA Visit
- AOA leaves impression on White House Conference on Aging
- FTC Upheld
- USPSTF Release
- AOA to Census Bureau Doctor the optimal word
- Help veterans access timely quality care
- AOA Patient safety paramount in contact lens legislation
- AOA authorities target illegal contact sellers
- Legislators petition FTC on retailers unscrupulous tactics
- AOA Opternatives doc locator appears to falsely imply endorsement
- Online vision test receives failing grade from doctor of optometry
- AOA complaints lead to changes in 1 800 Contacts business practice
- AOA warns public about online eye exams
- AOA affiliates continue to challenge online eye exams
- For parents, pediatric benefit brings clarity and consistency
- Be on the lookout Illegal contact lenses
- AOA fights for patient safety in contact lens legislation
- Choice Act offers new opportunities to care for veterans
- AOA backs legislative effort to expand veterans access to eye care
- AOA president to IOM Comprehensive eye exams essential to prevention and public health
- AOA in national roundtable on the future of diabetes care
- AOA Efforts on Contact Lens Bills Guided By Patient Health Concerns
AOA complaint focuses FDA sights on Opternative
November 29, 2016
In a meeting with AOA president-elect, FDA officials point to importance of AOA complaint against Opternative and its ongoing inquiry into company’s claims.
Tag(s): Advocacy, Patient Protection
AOA President-elect Christopher J. Quinn, O.D., and AOA staff convened an in-depth meeting with U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officials on Nov. 4 to discuss purported online vision "exams," including Opternative.
During the meeting, a result of bipartisan Congressional interest in the expansive complaint the AOA submitted to the FDA in April 2016, Dr. Quinn and the team reinforced its serious concerns and elaborated on new and additional grounds for alarm over Opternative's online test, which claims that it yields prescriptions for eye glasses and contact lenses that are "as accurate as an in-person, refractive eye exam."
Specifically, AOA team members detailed the lack of credible evidence supporting the use of unsupervised, self-administered vision tests. The AOA also described a persistent effort by online vision tests to evade federal oversight and regulation, as well as continued, deceptive marketing tactics that mislead patients and potentially jeopardize their eye and vision health.
"It is the AOA's view that patients will incorrectly believe that these 'FDA-regulated' tests provide them with results similar to what they would get from their eye doctor, when in fact, tools like Opternative allow potentially serious eye, vision and health issues to fall through the cracks," Dr. Quinn says.
"In-person eye exams uncover the full range of vision problems, eye disease diagnosis, as well as a multitude of systemic health problems such as diabetes," he says. "Opternative's online 'exam' is no replacement for the doctor-patient relationship. The FDA is taking our concerns seriously and is investigating Opternative based on the expansive and detailed complaint AOA filed. We look forward to an ongoing dialogue with the FDA officials."
Nine representatives from the AOA and FDA met face to face at the federal agency's Silver Spring, Maryland, headquarters, and with the FDA Centers for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH), the AOA walked through the details of its complaint, underscoring how the Opternative medical device has not delivered any credible scientific evidence that it works.
There are no peer-reviewed studies of the online device and media investigations have borne out that these online technologies are not always accurate and can miss sight-threatening and life-saving diagnoses. The team highlighted that further investigation and regulation is needed to uphold the FDA's duty to patients and the public to ensure safe and effective care, obligations already met by doctors of optometry.
Greater danger
The unapproved Opternative medical device is an even greater danger to the public than originally thought.
"The Opternative medical device is fundamentally different from any predicate device currently on the market," says Michael Dueñas, O.D., AOA chief public health officer. "It is manipulating some components of an eye exam in an unproven way and, ultimately, providing inappropriate or ineffective care is worse than providing 'no care,' as it creates a false sense of security."
The AOA's new and additional concerns? Opternative is aggressively marketing itself to high-risk populations, appealing to a desire for convenience and belittling the importance of an in-person, comprehensive eye exam.
Looking at today's combination of convenience-minded patients with an unregulated market, the AOA expressed significant concerns about the potential proliferation of copycat devices in the absence of FDA action.
With this in mind, the AOA believes that all associated risks of the Opternative medical device should be responsibly identified against benefits to help support the FDA in taking appropriate regulatory action. The FDA representatives responded that the agency is investigating: "We're looking at the science and how it can be appropriately regulated. At the end of the day, we always make decisions that are in the best interests of the patient."
AOA's continued advocacy for patients
In August, AOA Trustee and Federal Keyperson, Jim DeVleming, O.D., briefed his congressional representative, Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), chair of the House Republican Conference, about AOA's concerns and the complaint itself. For added impact, Dr. DeVleming was joined by Steven A. Loomis, O.D., AOA immediate past president, who oversaw the complaint's drafting and formally submitted it to FDA officials.
"Leaders of the Optometric Physicians of Washington have provided me with a copy of their complaint to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration regarding Opternative's new testing device," Congresswoman McMorris Rodgers said. "They have outlined why they see the potential for the public to be misled and why they've asked for enforcement action.
"While we must continue to support technological innovations in the medical field, the health and safety of patients should be our No. 1 priority," McMorris Rodger added. "I believe it is of the utmost importance to fully understand how the FDA intends to respond, and what actions they may take in the future to ensure compliance with the law."
Also, Peter Theo, executive director of the Wisconsin Optometric Association, and its leaders have been actively educating the public about inaccurate claims about online vision tests. Theo participated in a roundtable discussion with the Speaker of the House. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.).
Thirteen states have enacted critical patient protection laws that reinforce the benefits of in-person, comprehensive eye exams, including Georgia, Indiana, Nebraska and South Carolina among others. In October, Opternative and its legal arm, Institute for Justice, sued South Carolina in an attempt to expand their business in spite of patient safety concerns.
The AOA will continue to rally against the suit.