In what represents the first patenting from Eyecheq Inc., the company is seeking protection for its self-guided eye examination systems which may be mounted in easily movable and transportable kiosks, on tabletop stands, walls or suspended from ceilings.
Beyond its success in migraine and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, Nu Eyne Co. Ltd. is advancing a portfolio of noninvasive, wearable trigeminal nerve stimulation devices across key three areas of neuromodulation, tissue regeneration and proliferation inhibition.
Alcon AG completed the acquisition of Belkin Vision Ltd. with an upfront consideration of $81 million with an additional $385 million in contingent payments. With the deal, Alcon gets its hands on Belkin’s U.S. FDA-cleared direct selective laser trabeculoplasty device, expanding its treatment options for patients with glaucoma.
Ultrasound cyclodestruction may not be the darling of American ophthalmologists and their patients dealing with glaucoma, but that may soon change thanks to a recent move by the U.S. FDA. The agency has down-classified these devices from class III to class II in a move that may prompt competition for current device-based methods of treating glaucoma, including widely used laser-based treatments.
Denver-based Arcscan Inc. gained Chinese approval of its computer-controlled, ultra-high frequency ultrasound diagnostic imaging solution for myopia called Insight 100, expanding its reach beyond the U.S. and Europe.
As Johnson & Johnson's (J&J) first-quarter revenue missed Wall Street estimates for medical devices on April 16, CEO Joaquin Duato noted that the company will continue to look for major M&A plays to boost long-term growth in the wake of its recently reported $13.1 billion buy of Shockwave Medical Inc.
The notion of using vacuum pressure on the anterior portion of the human eye as a treatment for open-angle glaucoma might be a clinical novelty, but Balance Ophthalmics Inc. is poised to change that. The company recently won a favorable outcome at a U.S. FDA advisory panel for its Fsyx negative pressure pump for ocular use, although the company is likely to have to drum up a large body of data in post-approval studies, assuming the FDA gives the Fsyx the nod.
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced in May 2023 that it had obtained a judgment of more than $487 million against the parent company of Precision Lens for alleged violations of the False Claims Act (FCA), but the amount of that decision has been overturned. In a Feb. 8 decision, the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota decreed that the judgment be reduced to less than $217 million, an outcome which suggests that some of the more excessive fines levied against health care companies will be viewed with more skepticism upon appeal.
Spyglass Ophthalmics Inc. is seeking patent protection for intraocular drug delivery devices and methods of delivering therapeutic agents to the eye. The methods include implanting an intraocular implant into the eye and adjacent to a fluid-permeable membrane of the patient’s eye.
Primary open-angle glaucoma is the leading cause of blindness globally. Individuals of African ancestry have a disproportionately high risk of developing glaucoma, but genetic risk factors have been studied mainly in populations of European ancestry.