Category: Flavors

  • Menthol bans spreading

    Menthol bans spreading

    US anti-smoking groups, frustrated by federal inaction on restricting menthol cigarettes, are taking matters into their own hands, according to a story by Paul Feldman for salon.com.

    In recent months, a number of cities are said to have passed laws limiting the availability of menthol cigarettes, which health advocates say have a particular appeal to those starting to smoke. One city voted this month to restrict sales to adult-only tobacco and liquor stores.

    “For a long time, everyone hoped that FDA [the Food and Drug Administration] would move forward,” Matthew L. Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, was quoted as saying. “As those hopes dissipated, there was a growing consensus that communities needed to act.”

    Feldman said that of at least a dozen cities and counties across the nation that had approved restrictions, San Francisco had been the most ambitious. In June, officials there had agreed on an outright sales ban that was supposed to have taken effect in April 2018. But a petition drive funded by R.J. Reynolds, producer of the top-selling menthol brand, Newport, had forced a June 2018 ballot measure on the proposed ban.

    If voters supported the ban, other cities might be emboldened to follow San Francisco’s lead. And with menthols accounting for about 30 percent of US cigarette sales, billions of dollars could be riding on the outcome.

    The battle stems from a 2009 law that authorized the FDA to regulate tobacco products. The law included a ban on candy, fruit and spice flavors in cigarettes, but Congress exempted menthol while directing the FDA to determine if it, too, should be restricted or banned. A 2013 FDA committee report found it was ‘likely that menthol cigarettes pose a public health risk above that seen with non-menthol cigarettes’.

    But the agency has restricted menthol in cigarettes.

    Feldman’s story is at: https://www.salon.com/2017/12/17/tired-of-waiting-for-the-feds-local-groups-target-menthol-cigarettes_partner/.

  • FDA seeks industry flavour

    FDA seeks industry flavour

    The US Food and Drug Administration is inviting companies that develop or manufacture tobacco product flavors to participate in a voluntary Flavor Developer and Manufacturer Site Tours Program, according to an announcement by the agency’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP).

    The program is intended to help the FDA understand how flavors used in tobacco products are developed, tested, and produced.

    The CTP said the tours were solely for educational purposes and were not regulatory inspections.

    Starting today, interested companies will have 60 days to submit a response online at regulations.gov docket FDA-2017-N-3998, or by mail to FDA’s Dockets Management Staff.

    Further information is at:

    https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2017/09/19/2017-19900/flavor-developer-and-manufacturer-site-tours-program

  • Flavor ban harmful

    Flavor ban harmful

    If the US city of San Francisco ultimately implements its recently adopted ordinance to ban the sale of flavored tobacco products, it will do more harm than good, according to an op-ed by Dr. Joel Nitzkin published on the R Street website.

    In fact, the ban would increase rates of tobacco-related addiction, illness and death across the city.

    ‘There are two major issues with this ordinance,’ Nitzkin said. ‘The first is the ease with which persons who want these products can simply get them in neighboring communities, or from a thriving black market sure to develop within the city.

    ‘The second, and more important, is the fact that this ban will virtually eliminate local on-site access to less addictive and remarkably low-risk nicotine vapor products.

    ‘While barring access to most e-cigarettes, the ordinance will do nothing to reduce access to non-menthol cigarettes, which remain the deadliest and most addictive tobacco products.’

    The full text of Nitzkin’s piece is at: http://www.rstreet.org/op-ed/flavored-tobacco-ordinance-sure-to-backfire/.

  • FDA urged to ban menthol

    FDA urged to ban menthol

    Eight US senators have urged the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ban sales of menthol cigarettes, according to a MassLive.com story relayed by the TMA.

    In a letter to the FDA, the senators urged the agency to ‘act on the substantial scientific data’ available by exercising its authority under the Tobacco Control Act to prohibit menthol-cigarette sales.

    The lawmakers praised the FDA for its work on discouraging youth smoking and raising public awareness of its harms.

    But they said menthol cigarettes were a ‘starter product for youth’ and that they posed ‘a public health risk above that seen with non-menthol cigarettes’.

    ‘Continued delay on this issue will only further worsen this public health crisis, as a new generation of smokers are initiated and become addicted to menthol cigarettes …,’ the senators said.

    ‘We urge the FDA to use its authority to expediently remove menthol as a flavor additive.’

  • Qualified support for FDA

    Qualified support for FDA

    A US senator has decried the electronic-cigarette provisions of the Food and Drug Administration’s Comprehensive Plan for Tobacco and Nicotine Regulation, which was announced on Friday.

    “The tobacco industry produces products that kill thousands of Americans each year, and sustains itself by recruiting ‘replacement smokers’ by marketing to young adults,” Oregon’s Senator Jeff Merkley, the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee overseeing the FDA, said in a statement posted on his website. “That’s why we were hoping to hear a strong plan from the FDA today [Friday].

    “Unfortunately, the FDA instead announced that it will allow e-cigarette products, largely aimed at children, to remain on the market for five more years with very little regulation.

    “According to the CDC’s [Center for Disease Control and Prevention] latest data, 20 percent of high school students, and seven percent of middle school students – 12 and 13 year old kids – use e-cigarettes. And they use it [sic] because they have names like ‘cotton candy’, ‘froot loops’ and ‘gummy bear’. These are not products targeted towards adults. “While the FDA’s goal of reducing the level of nicotine in traditional cigarettes is an important and admirable goal, it does nothing to address the growing threat of e-cigarette usage. Thousands more children will become addicted during this time, and everyone who cares about America’s youth should be deeply concerned by this decision.”

    Meanwhile, the American Heart Association (AHA) has said that while the FDA’s move to lower nicotine and examine flavoring comprise a promising step, the Deeming Rule delay is disappointing. It is concerned, also, that the FDA has raised the possibility of exempting premium cigars in the future.

    “FDA’s move today to lower nicotine levels and take a harder look at how flavored tobacco products attract the young is to be commended,” said AHA CEO Nancy Brown.

    “However, the Association is disappointed with the agency’s decision to delay certain e-cigarette and cigar compliance deadlines. Altering the deadline for FDA review of e-cigarettes and cigars is a troubling step and one that we will closely monitor.

    “We are also concerned that the FDA has raised the possibility of exempting premium cigars in the future. Tobacco in any form presents risk. That’s why we have advocated for – and will continue to insist – that FDA oversight of all tobacco products is absolutely essential. Premium cigars are no different. Cigars are a concern because high school-aged males now smoke them at a higher rate than [they smoke] cigarettes. As we have seen in recent Senate legislation, often the definition for ‘premium cigars’ creates a loophole that allows the flavored and cheap cigars that attract youth to qualify as ‘premium’. Weakening the deeming rule in any way could lead to an increasing number of Americans at risk for heart disease, stroke or even an early death due to tobacco use.

    “As the FDA carries out its new nicotine and tobacco plan, we urge the agency to remember that protecting public health, particularly the health of young people in this country, should be at the very top of its priority list. While we look forward to agency actions that can lower the number of Americans exposed to the harms of combustible tobacco, the FDA must advance all tobacco regulation. We must not take two steps forward and then one step back.”

    The 22nd Century Group welcomed the FDA’s announcement. The group said that it was ‘uniquely positioned to deliver on the new product standards’ given that its proprietary “Very Low Nicotine” cigarettes contained less than 0.6 mg nicotine per piece and yielded less than 0.05 mg nicotine per piece. These levels represented a nicotine reduction of at least 95 percent relative to the levels of other cigarette brands.

    The group said its tobacco was grown on ‘independently-owned farms in US, and was not subjected to any ‘artificial extraction or chemical processes’.

    It was the only company globally that was capable of growing tobacco with non-addictive levels of nicotine.

    The cigarettes produced from this tobacco, it added, had the ‘taste and sensory characteristics of conventional cigarettes’.

  • Nicotine takes Center stage

    Nicotine takes Center stage

    Altria on Friday described the US Food and Drug Administration’s Comprehensive Plan for Tobacco and Nicotine Regulation as an important evolution in the Agency’s approach to regulating tobacco products and a meaningful step forward in developing a comprehensive regulatory policy that acknowledges the continuum of risk.

    ‘We supported FDA regulation because, among other things, it created a framework for communication about reduced harm products,’ the company said in a note posted on its website. ‘Reconsideration of the rules and timelines for newly deemed products is an important and timely step in this effort.

    ‘The process outlined by the [FDA] commissioner today will allow all stakeholders the opportunity to participate in a science and evidence based regulatory framework which is “transparent, predictable, and sustainable”.

    ‘It’s important to understand that any proposed rule such as a nicotine product standard must be based on science and evidence, must not lead to unintended consequences and must be technically achievable. Establishing a standard of any sort is a deliberative process, with multiple opportunities for interested parties to provide perspectives. We intend to be fully engaged throughout this process.’

    In announcing its plan, the FDA said it would serve as a multi-year roadmap to better protect young people and significantly reduce tobacco-related disease and death.

    The approach placed nicotine, and the issue of addiction, at the center of the agency’s tobacco regulation efforts, the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) said in a press note. The goal was to ensure that the FDA had the proper scientific and regulatory foundation efficiently and effectively to implement the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act.’

    “Envisioning a world where cigarettes would no longer create or sustain addiction, and where adults who still need or want nicotine could get it from alternative and less harmful sources, needs to be the cornerstone of our efforts – and we believe it’s vital that we pursue this common ground,” said FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb.

    Among other aspects of the comprehensive approach, the FDA plans to:

    • ‘Issue an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) to seek input on the potential public health benefits and any possible adverse effects of lowering nicotine in cigarettes. This will help begin a public dialogue about lowering nicotine levels in combustible cigarettes to non-addictive levels through achievable product standards.’
    • ‘Extend timelines to submit tobacco product review applications for newly-regulated tobacco products that were on the market as of Aug. 8, 2016. This will allow the agency to further examine how existing regulatory science can encourage innovations that have the potential to make a notable public health difference and inform policies and efforts that will best protect kids and help smokers quit cigarettes. Under the expected revised timeline, the application deadlines for newly-regulated products would be as follows: combustible products, such as cigars and hookah tobacco, Aug. 8, 2021; non-combustible products, such as ENDS or e-cigarettes, Aug. 8, 2022.’
    • ‘Further explore how best to protect public health in the evolving tobacco marketplace by issuing two ANPRMs to seek input from the public on a variety of significant topics, including: ‘The role that flavors (including menthol) in tobacco products play in attracting youth and may play in helping some smokers switch to potentially less harmful forms of nicotine delivery’; and ‘The patterns of use and resulting public health impacts from premium cigars, which were included in the FDA’s 2016 rule’.

    The FDA’s announcement was generally positively received, though it was acknowledged that some devils could lie lurking in the details.

    The R Street Institute welcome the FDA announcement saying it would postpone a regulation, previously set to take effect this fall, that would have forced manufacturers to get agency approval for tobacco and nicotine products introduced to the market after February 2007. This costly process would, in practice, have resulted in the near-complete elimination of harm-reduction tools such as electronic cigarettes from the market.

    R Street’s harm reduction policy director Carrie Wade said the FDA’s plans should be considered an important first step to reorient FDA regulation of tobacco products from a process designed to protect the sales and profits of the major cigarette makers to one designed to reduce tobacco-related addiction, illness and death.

    “R Street has been one of the leading proponents of a harm-reduction approach to cigarette addiction, so to read today’s [Friday’s] announcement feels like vindication that someone is listening,” Wade said. “It’s taken a little while, but it seems the FDA is beginning to realize something the scientific community woke up to years ago: policies aimed at destroying the e-cigarette market actually would result in the unintended consequence of more smokers sticking with traditional combustible cigarettes.”

    Jeff Stier, the director of the Risk Analysis Division of the National Center for Public Policy Research, said he applauded Gottlieb and the CTP for making sweeping changes to the Obama-era approach to tobacco regulation that would have effectively banned almost all e-cigarettes on the market today.

    “The most significant change is that the FDA’s regulatory approach will now seek to implement a ‘tobacco harm reduction’ approach, recognizing that there’s a continuum of risk among different nicotine products,” he said.

    “In other words, it will not impose onerous deadlines and ill-defined requirements for so-called pre-market tobacco applications.

    “The FDA will first develop clear, science-based product standards before manufacturers would be required to submit applications.

    “The FDA will now begin to develop new rules which will recognize that non-combustible lower-risk products such as e-cigarettes and next generation ‘heat not burn’ products should no longer be treated solely as public health threats. The FDA will instead embark on a rule-making process whereby the products will be regulated based on their risk profile. This approach, if implemented properly, will foster a robust market offering a range of options to smokers who wish to reduce the risk from smoking.”

    Alex Clark, the CEO of the Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association (CASAA) described the FDA plan as a positive step forward in preserving consumer access to low-risk vapor products. Most importantly, it said, the forthcoming guidance from the FDA would play a vital role in reducing harm for millions of Americans who continued to smoke and would benefit from honest information about low-risk alternatives to combustible tobacco.

    “Delaying the deadline for pre-market tobacco applications from vapor product manufacturers is an important first-step.” said Alex Clark, CASAA’s CEO.

    “CASAA and our membership have been asking for this delay since March as it allows science, genuine public health, and consumer needs – rather than ideology – to contribute to developing reasonable and achievable regulation of low-risk nicotine products.

    “Too much of the current legislative and regulatory efforts are born out of fear and misinformation. As a result, policymakers and regulators are losing sight of the most important goal – reducing the harm from traditional combustible tobacco products.”

    The Vapor Technology Association focused on the FDA’s granting of a four-year extension of the deadline for Premarket Tobacco Applications for electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) until August 8, 2022. “This decision is a victory for science-based regulation and for public health,” said Tony Abboud, VTA’s executive director.

    “By recognizing that US policies need to evolve to the current state of science which demonstrates that ENDS products are at least 95 percent safer than combustible cigarettes, FDA is taking a big step forward in protecting public health by acknowledging for the first time that ENDS are a harm reduction product and need to be regulated as such.

    “By delaying the deadline for compliance for electronic nicotine delivery systems, FDA has also recognized that the current regulations have halted the kind of technological innovation that is key to ending this country’s reliance on combustible cigarettes, and that we need to implement clear and meaningful regulations that strike the right balance between consumer protection and fostering innovation.”

    But not everyone agreed. Matthew L. Myers, resident of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said the sweeping tobacco regulatory agenda proposed by Gottlieb represented a bold and comprehensive vision with the potential to accelerate progress in reducing tobacco use and the death and disease it caused in the US. “Critical to his vision is his recognition that the components of his proposal need to work together as ‘a package deal – ‘it is really all or nothing,’ as he put it,” Myers said in a statement.

    “At the same time, it is a serious error for the FDA to significantly delay critical deadlines for complying with the FDA’s 2016 rule establishing oversight of electronic cigarettes, cigars and other previously unregulated tobacco products.

    “This long delay will allow egregious, kid-friendly e-cigarettes and cigars, in flavors like gummy bear, cherry crush and banana smash, to stay on the market with little public health oversight. There is no reason to allow these products to stay on the market while developing and implementing the comprehensive strategy Dr. Gottlieb outlined today [Friday].”

  • E-liquid policy must change

    E-liquid policy must change

    The head of the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation has told a federal parliamentary committee that the country’s policy on e-liquids must change, according to an Australian Associated Press story.

    Electronic cigarettes are licit products in Australia but the sale and possession of the nicotine used in them is illegal.

    Dr. Alex Wodak, a retired doctor, cited a major study by a public health agency in England that found electronic cigarettes were about 95 percent safer than were combustible cigarettes.

    Australia should facilitate easy access to a diverse range of products, such as flavoured nicotine liquids, that would appeal to smokers who wanted to quit, he said.

    “It’s very important, in harm reduction and public health generally, to have your intervention [be] attractive to the people most at risk,” he said.

    “I think having a vibrant vaping community network, through the distribution of vaping shops, is very important from a public health perspective.”

    Meanwhile, Colin Mendelsohn, an associate professor in the School of Public Health and Community Medicine at the University of NSW, said Australia’s policy focus on abstinence when it came to smoking was naive in the face of another option: harm minimisation.

    “The reality is that many smokers are unable or unwilling to quit,” said Mendelsohn, who is a GP and tobacco treatment specialist helping smokers to quit. “We can’t just sacrifice them.”

    The committing is hearing from experts about how the health risks of electronic cigarettes and combustible products compare, and how such products should be regulated.

    The AAP story is at: http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2017/07/12/doctors-plead-e-cigarette-reforms.

  • Health improvements noted

    The Spanish vapers’ association, Anesvap, has published research results that confirm what other studies have shown: that vaping does not act as a gateway to smoking for young adults, that vaping is not as addictive as smoking, and that vaping dramatically reduces smoking rates, according to a story by Diane Caruana published on vapingpost.com.

    The research suggests that 99.6 percent of vapers in Spain are adults and that the average age is 38.5 years. They comprise about 80 percent men and 20 percent women.

    The average nicotine concentration vapers use when they first start vaping is 11.42 mg/ml, while the overall average concentration is 4.04 mg/ml.

    More than 85 percent of the study subjects stated that the wide array of flavors available were important in enticing them to switch from smoking to vaping, a finding that is in line with what many public health experts have been saying in response to e-liquid flavour bans.

    Ninety percent of respondents said that they started vaping in a bid to improve their health, and more than 92 percent of those said they had detected improvements in their health.

  • If you’re going to …

    If you’re going to …

    San Francisco is to ban the sale of flavored cigarettes, including menthol products, from April next year, according to a story by Joshua Sabatini on sfexaminter.com.

    On Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors approved unanimously legislation introduced by supervisor Malia Cohen that prohibits retailers from selling flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes, flavored chewing tobacco and flavored liquids containing nicotine used in electronic cigarettes.

    Such products were said to impact disproportionately the LGBT and black communities.

    “We want to enhance our prevention strategies,” Cohen was reported to have said. “The goal of this ordinance is to keep people from smoking in the first place.”

    The ban drew opposition from small businesses, and from the Small Business Commission which represents them, for the impact it would have on their bottom-lines and the concern that patrons would only shop online or in other counties for the same products.

    To address the business concerns, Cohen amended the legislation to have it go into effect in April 2018, rather than January, when it was originally aimed to come into force. She said also she would support increased city funding to help small stores transition their business models under the Healthy Food Retail program.

    The legislation was said to build on a September 2009 US Food and Drug Administration ban on ‘characterizing flavors’ in cigarettes.

    Sabatini’s piece is at: http://www.sfexaminer.com/sf-bans-sale-menthol-cigarettes-will-eliminate-least-50-5m-tobacco-sales/

  • Kaymich software extended

    Kaymich software extended

    The adhesive-application and fluid-control systems supplier, C.B. Kaymich, said yesterday that it had developed its Gemini Data Capture software to include the option of barcoding.

    ‘The Gemini Data Capture software is a quality assurance package, providing batch traceability of filters, foil or cigarette,’ Kaymich said in a press note.

    ‘Originally developed for the production of mentholated foil bobbins, the barcode printer enabled users to quickly and easily apply a label which identified what the foil bobbin was, when it was made and which brand it was for.

    ‘The concept was then developed further to provide the same capability for any batch production resulting in the add-on product now available for the Gemini Flavour Application System.’

    “This additional Gemini capability makes it incredibly simple and easy to identify the brand and examine all the production settings for the finished product”, said Kaymich’s Tim Williams.

    “The system can be configured to suit the company’s specific process needs and even to offer personalised user permissions.

    “Put simply, it allows users to record production settings for later analysis and better understanding of each production batch.”

    More information about the Gemini Data Capture is at: www.kaymich.com.