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FDA regulation of labeling and promotional claims in therapeutic color vision devices: A tutorial

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2005

BRUCE DRUM
Affiliation:
FDA, Division of Ophthalmic and ENT Devices, 9200 Corporate Blvd., Rockville

Abstract

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is responsible for determining whether medical device manufacturers have provided reasonable assurance, based on valid scientific evidence, that new devices are safe and effective for their intended use before they are introduced into the U.S. market. Most existing color vision devices pose so little risk that their manufacturers are not required to submit a premarket notification [510(k)] to FDA prior to market. However, even low-risk devices may not be acceptable if they are marketed on the basis of misleading or excessive claims. Although most color vision devices are diagnostic, two types that are therapeutic rather than diagnostic are colored lenses intended to improve deficient color vision and colored lenses intended to improve reading performance. Both of these devices have presented special regulatory challenges to FDA because the intended uses and effectiveness claims initially proposed by the manufacturers were not supported by valid scientific evidence. In each instance, however, FDA worked with the manufacturer to restrict labeling and promotional claims in ways that were consistent with the available device performance data and that allowed for the legal marketing of the device.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This paper represents the professional opinion of the author and is not an official document, guidance or policy of the U.S. Government, the Department of Health and Human Services, or the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), nor should any official endorsement be inferred.

References

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