FDA's New Tobacco Strategy: What Does It Mean for Your Vape Business?
On Friday July 28, 2017, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced its new "comprehensive regulatory plan to shift trajectory of tobacco-related disease, death" that refocuses the Agency's implementation of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (TCA) and the Deeming Rule. FDA's new strategy appears to be moving away from its "one-size-fits-all" approach to tobacco product regulation by recognizing that a "continuum of risk" of tobacco and nicotine-containing products exists. While FDA has indicated that its long-term plan is to, among other things, potentially lower nicotine in cigarettes to non-addictive levels, it also made major changes to its compliance policy for recently "deemed" tobacco products that immediately impacts manufacturers of e-vapor, e-liquid, cigars, hookah and pipe tobacco products.
Background: FDA Compliance Policy for Deemed Tobacco Products
The Deeming Rule became effective on August 8, 2016, extending FDA's tobacco product authority over newly deemed products and subjecting manufacturers to the requirements in the Tobacco Control Act, including adulteration and misbranding prohibitions, establishment registration and product listing for manufacturing facilities located in the United States, ingredient reporting, testing for Harmful and Potentially Harmful Constituents (HPHCs), a ban on unauthorized modified or reduced-risk claims and, most significantly, premarket authorization for any new products first marketed or modified after the February 15, 2007 "grandfather date".
How Will This Impact Your Vape Business?
While the PMTA delay provides much needed breathing room on the most complicated and expensive requirement - and saves the vapor industry from a de facto ban - it is important for vape businesses to understand that none of the other fast approaching TCA deadlines have been impacted by FDA's new policy.
Requirement
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Deadline for Large-Scale Manufacturers
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Deadline for Small-Scale Manufacturers
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Free sample ban, age restriction, photo-ID check, use of modified/reduced risk claims and descriptors, adulteration and misbranding prohibitions
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August 8, 2016
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Introduction of new, deemed products without FDA premarket authorization (products on the market before this date are subject to the new compliance policy deadlines)
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August 8, 2016
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Registration of U.S. manufacturing establishments and submission of List of Products manufactured in such establishments [does not apply to foreign establishments]
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September 30, 2017
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Submission of Health Document Notification
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February 8, 2017
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November 8, 2017
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Submission of Ingredient Listing Reports
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November 8, 2017
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May 8, 2018
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Submission of Harmful and Potentially Harmful Constituents (HPHCs) reports
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November 8, 2019
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Nicotine Addiction Warning on Labels and Advertisements
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August 10, 2018
(distribution of products without the required warning must cease by September 10, 2018)
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PMTA or SE Report for deemed combustible products (
e.g. cigars or hookah) on market on August 8, 2016
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August 8, 2021
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PMTA or SE Report for deemed non-combustible products (e.g., vapor products) on August 8, 2016
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August 8, 2022
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What's Next?
Beyond the immediate PMTA delay, FDA broadly announced that it is working to develop foundational rules and guidance, including rules and guidance to clarify the requirements for the SE Reporting process, PMTAs, and Modified Risk Tobacco Product (MRTPs) applications and the standards of review. Specifically, FDA:- Plans to issue product standards for vapor products to protect against known public health risks;
- Will issue new "foundational rules" and guidance to modify the product review process and clarify the requirements for the SE Reporting process, PMTAs, and Modified Risk Tobacco Product (MRTPs) applications;
- Will study the effects of flavors (including menthol), both on young people and adult smokers looking for a less harmful alternative;
- Will begin a public dialogue through an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) on the impact of reducing nicotine in cigarettes to non-addictive levels (FDA stressed that, at this time, it is only contemplating a reduction in nicotine in cigarettes and not for other tobacco (i.e., vapor) products); and
- Will issue an ANPRM soliciting comments and data relating to the use and public health impacts of premium cigars.