Article | April 30, 2019

You're Holding Your Eye Drops Wrong – What Makes Ophthalmology Trials So Challenging?

Source: Biorasi

By Jennifer Dennis-Wall, Ph.D.

eye

Recently, one of our resident experts in ophthalmology, Ignacio Handal, gave a training for some of our current studies with a focus on which pitfalls to avoid specifically in ophthalmology trials. He dished out many fun facts and eye-opening insights.

Compliance is difficult enough to achieve for any medication, and remembering to take eye drops on top of oral medications is an easily forgettable extra step. Only half of glaucoma patients are compliant with treatment regimens, and that proportion falls further as the number of other prescribed medications increases. Eye drops are also uncomfortable (who wants to hold their eye open while they pour in a foreign liquid?). They can also be annoying and troublesome to administer, if the method is to try to hold the bottle steady while dangling it over your eye, especially if tremors are involved. But something many people don’t know is that the bottles are designed to rest on the bridge of your nose! This way, hand-eye coordination is less of an issue, and you sure don’t want to miss. Some of these eye drop medications are upwards of $600 per tiny bottle.

access the Article!

Get unlimited access to:

Trend and Thought Leadership Articles
Case Studies & White Papers
Extensive Product Database
Members-Only Premium Content
Welcome Back! Please Log In to Continue. X

Enter your credentials below to log in. Not yet a member of Clinical Leader? Subscribe today.

Subscribe to Clinical Leader X

Please enter your email address and create a password to access the full content, Or log in to your account to continue.

or

Subscribe to Clinical Leader