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RECRUITING
NCT06596733
NA

Vit-A-Vision® Clinical Investigation

Sponsor: OmniVision GmbH

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Symptoms of ocular discomfort include dryness, burning, stinging, photophobia, foreign body sensation and contact lens intolerance. These symptoms may affect basic daily activities, such as reading, driving, and working with computers. In case of moderate to severe conditions, dry eye disease is also associated with significant pain. Dry eye disease (DED) affects hundreds of millions of people throughout the world and is one of the most frequent causes of patient visits to eye care practitioners. Diagnosing, staging and determining the efficacy of therapy in DED is often challenging due to low correlation between signs and symptoms. Furthermore, its management is complicated because of its multifactorial aetiology. In general, management approaches begin with conventional, low-risk and easily accessible patient-applied therapies such as over-the-counter lubricants for early-stage disease, and progress to more advanced therapies for more severe forms of DED. In this regard, tear supplementation with ocular lubricants (artificial tears) is considered the first-line therapy and is often the only therapy used in mild to moderate disease. They are used in all stages of dry eye, either alone (in mild to moderate disease) or in combination with other treatments (in moderate to severe disease). Most tear supplements act as lubricants. Other actions may include replacement of deficient tear constituents, dilution of proinflammatory substances, reduction of tear osmolarity and protection against osmotic stress. A wide variety of artificial tear products is currently available. These products differ with respect to several variables, that include electrolyte composition, osmolarity/osmolality, viscosity, the presence or absence of preservatives and the presence or absence of compatible solutes. Although they are all considered as standard of care in treatment of dry eye disease, the effects of many of the available products have not been evaluated in clinical investigations. Vit-A-Vision is an ointment for ophthalmic application that relieves symptoms such as burning, irritation, slight irritation, dryness or tiredness of the eyes.

Official title: Clinical Investigation to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Vit-A-Vision® When Used in Dry Eye Disease

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

77

Start Date

2025-12-19

Completion Date

2026-10-31

Last Updated

2026-01-16

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Vit-A-Vision

Participants will apply Vit-A-Vision ointment on a daily basis, up to 3 times daily per eye, for at least 30 days.

Locations (1)

Dept. of Ophthalmology Cologne Merheim

Cologne, Germany