FDA approves prescription eye drops which can replace reading glasses

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I’m in my late 40s and feeling it. I exercise a lot but still manage to pull out my back doing stupid sh-t like getting out of bed, I forget what I meant to get in the kitchen constantly and I need a nap every day although that’s not a bad sign everyone should be taking naps. However nothing made me feel older than when I started to need reading glasses a few years ago. It wasn’t that bad to start with, I got one bifocal contact lens and that worked fine. Then I needed 1.0 readers and now I need 1.25. I leave reading glasses throughout the house and have some in my purse and car but still end up forgetting them and holding my phone far away from my face. The good news is that there’s a new prescription eye drop that’s FDA approved to treat blurry near-sightedness. It’s called Viuty and is available now. It sounds like it’s meant to treat mild presbyopia because it’s not recommended for people over 65 as it’s not as effective.

A newly approved eye drop hitting the market on Thursday could change the lives of millions of Americans with age-related blurred near vision, a condition affecting mostly people 40 and older.

Vuity, which was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in October, would potentially replace reading glasses for some of the 128 million Americans who have trouble seeing close-up. The new medicine takes effect in about 15 minutes, with one drop on each eye providing sharper vision for six to 10 hours, according to the company.

Toni Wright, one of the 750 participants in a clinical trial to test the drug, said she liked what she saw.

“It’s definitely a life changer,” Wright told CBS News national correspondent Jericka Duncan.

Before the trial, the only way Wright could see things clearly was by keeping reading glasses everywhere — in her office, bathroom, kitchen and car.

“I was in denial because to me that was a sign of growing older, you know, needing to wear glasses,” she said.

It was in 2019 that her doctor told her about a new eye drop with the potential to correct her vision problems, temporarily. The 54-year-old online retail consultant, who works from her farm in western Pennsylvania, instantly noticed a difference.

“I would not need my readers as much, especially on the computer, where I would always need to have them on,” she said.

Vuity is the first FDA-approved eye drop to treat age-related blurry near vision, also known as presbyopia. The prescription drug utilizes the eye’s natural ability to reduce its pupil size, said Dr. George Waring, the principal investigator for the trial.

“Reducing the pupil size expands the depth of field or the depth of focus, and that allows you to focus at different ranges naturally,” he said.

A 30-day supply of the drug will cost about $80 and works best in people 40 to 55 years old, a Vuity spokesperson said. Side effects detected in the three-month trial included headaches and red eyes, the company said.

[From CBS News]

I would pay $80 for this for one month to see how it works and if I get any side effects. I’m lucky I’m in a position to afford it. It seems so unfair that it’s not covered by health insurance. It may not be a necessity but medical advantages should be available to everyone. That’s how our for-profit healthcare system works. I checked the website for this product and you can use it with contact lenses, you just have to take your contact lenses out and then wait ten minutes before putting them in again. I’m going to see if my eye doctor can give me a prescription for this.

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Photos credit: Andrea Piacquadio, Polina Tankilevitch and Cottonbro on Pexels

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22 Responses to “FDA approves prescription eye drops which can replace reading glasses”

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  1. Genevieve says:

    Oh man, oh man. I would pay for this, for sure!

  2. Lizzie says:

    I always thought readers were cute so I don’t mind wearing them but not needing them would be nice. I’ll probably try this to see how well it works. My only tip about readers is I can only keep track of one or two pair, more than that and I don’t know where any of them are as I don’t take them off in the same room as I put them on.

  3. Alexandria says:

    Lol I might consider this if the headaches aren’t that bad. As for red eyes uh…so I become a Cullen?

  4. Mcmmom says:

    Wow! That’s crazy – and really compelling. I am intrigued, though I probably won’t do this. I am severely myopic and have worn contacts since 7th grade because my glasses are so thick, they distort the way my eyes look. I’ve always had a pair of backup glasses, but no matter how cute they were, once my lenses were in them, they looked awful and I wouldn’t wear them out of the house.

    I got readers a few years ago to wear over my contacts and it’s the first time I’ve been able to look cute in glasses. Plus – if I’m wearing my readers on a video call, I don’t have to wear eye makeup.

    But modern medicine is amazing and this is very cool.

    • BeanieBean says:

      I have a similar issue. Myopic since 7th grade, but not wearing glasses until 12 grade (forced to wear glass finally after failing the eye exam for my drivers license at 16), then steadily worse & worse until the lenses on my glasses were so thick they gave me ‘the incredible shrinking eye’ as my eye doc put it. And then, oh joy, I became presbyopic, too. I had no idea they were working on eye drops for this! Science is incredible & I bet this is just the beginning for us four-eyes.

  5. Catwoman says:

    I worked in ophthalmology for 32 years. This drug is very similar to one used many years ago for treating glaucoma. It is a miotic, a drug used to construct the pupil, with the very common side effect of brow ache, which is different than a headache and usually goes away with prolonged use. For myself, I am looking forward to the day I can get a bifocal lens implant when my cataracts get removed.

    • BeanieBean says:

      Well, now, that sounds intriguing, a bifocal lens implant. I’m told I have a cataract starting in each eye; I’d love being able to have good vision again without contact lenses. I know there’s an existing surgery, but my eye doc told me you don’t end up with 20/20 vision but rather ‘good enough’ vision & that I’d likely have to wear reading glasses. No thanks.

    • Jan90067 says:

      My dad likes to brag that at 94 he doesn’t “need” glasses; I have to remind him that when he had his cataract surgery they *implanted* the lenses IN his eyes lol. He doesn’t quite get it 😄

      I asked my Dr. about Lasix, but it seems it can correct EITHER the reading issue, OR the astigmatism, so I’d still need glasses for one or the other. Sigh… it’s progessive trifocals for me!

      I’d LOVE to try the drops, but as I just turned 65, guess I’m not in the age range 😩

  6. Joanna says:

    Wow! Science is amazing!

  7. Mary Mae says:

    I wonder what the efficacy range is for this. I’m probably well outside of it – my prescription numbers have always been somewhat ridiculous, but I do think it’s a solution that will help a lot of people.

  8. FHMom says:

    Just an FYI. Your reading prescription may not change for a very long time. I’m in my late 50’s and have had the same reading glasses prescription for about 10 years. I do hate it, though. Even with the glasses I can’t see, for example, things on a map that I used to see without glasses. Aging sucks.

    • NotSoSocialB says:

      Agree. I’m just south of 56 and only in the last year or so need to make sure I have adequate light to read small print. I am myopic, and wear a contact lens for that in my dominant eye, and generally do okay fine with reading ( with enough light) but have back-up progressive bifocal glasses. I wonder how these drops would affect corrected distance vision?

  9. K says:

    Oh my. Yes I want to try this.

  10. GR says:

    So they only tried it on 750 people, for at most two years? No way in hell is that stuff going near my eyes.

    • IMARA219 says:

      I have to read more on this product, but I’m opting out myself. I’ve been wearing glasses since 13, and at 38, I’ll just keep on. I’m okay with that.

  11. AppleCart says:

    my eyesight was really good up until 48. I actually thought I had beat it and would not readers. Then one day I could not read directions on a box. I was so bummed. I would 100% pay for this to avoid readers. I just wonder how long a bottle would last before it expires. I would not go through it in a month for sure.

    • SomeChick says:

      I love how cooking instructions are usually printed with the word INSTRUCTIONS big and bold and then the actual instructions in a tiny font with poor contrast. They should print “Find reading glasses” as the first instruction!

  12. CROOKSNNANNIES says:

    I thought there was debate over the healthiness/benefits of napping. Napping can boost mood and was shown to improve memory in some studies, but it can also signal that you aren’t getting enough sleep/quality sleep at night and can start a cycle of where you nap during the day then have a hard time falling asleep at night then napping during the day.

    It can be an easy habit to fall into, and I don’t think it’s fair to say “everyone” should nap. This is not everyone’s case obviously but as someone with frequent depressive episodes, the urge to nap is usually a sign I am not doing well.

    Also nap duration is important- daily naps an hour or longer have an associated increase of something like 30% for heart disease and 40% for diabetes. There isn’t that correlation with short naps.

    I don’t think naps mean you’re lazy. But I think if you can nap during the work day that’s a privilege most people can’t afford.

  13. nicegirl says:

    My youngest is 14, we’ve been using these drops for 2 months now at the recommendation of his specialist at OHSU. His vision has been improved in only 57 days, although slight, it’s truly amazing. Thank you for sharing this information.

  14. sassafras says:

    I’m 45 and just saw my eye dr about readers. I got Lasik 16 years ago that’s holding up great and he was really enthusiastic about these drops for me. I think they’d be perfect for times when I am wearing sunglasses/ out and about and need to read my phone/ book.

  15. Dee says:

    My husband is an ophthamologist and he’s been telling me about Vuity. Its an old drop called pilocarpine that is used to treat glaucoma but just received FDA approval to treat nearsigtedness is some people. Kind of like how bimatoprost is a glaucoma drug and it received FDA approval years ago to market as Latisse and grow your eyelashes. Vuity has to be used daily to be effective. The good news is there are several other drug companies that are working on getting approval for a drop that works similarly, so if the FDA approves 1 or 2 more, the price should come down from $80/month. And, if the Abbie drug rep my husband knows is to be believed, Abbie is going to roll out a cost-share program so some people can pay less than $80/month even now.

  16. Lucky says:

    As someone who couldn’t swing it monthly I could see this being GREAT for time when readers kinda suck. Doing repairs or troubleshooting machinery, also medicating my animals. Having readers then is hard because it’s on and off and on and off in a short period of time. I’d be like “drop drop” I’m good for field work today! lol