The FDA Has a Science Problem

“Holmanโ€™s departure from an agency that claims to want to reduce smoking to a tobacco company is more indicative of an underlying theme: tobacco and vaping companies are more committed to helping adults quit smoking than the FDA.” ~ Lindsey Stroud

Reprinted from Inside Sources

It was announced in July that Matthew Holman, the director of the Office of Science in the Food and Drug Administrationโ€™s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), was stepping down to take a job with Philip Morris International. The departure comes amid a crisis for CTP as the agency continues to delay determining the fate of hundreds of thousands of e-cigarette products.

In September 2020, e-cigarette manufacturers were required to submit premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) to continue offering their products for retail sale. The following September, the FDA issued denial orders for nearly 1 million flavored e-cigarette e-liquid products, prompting many small business manufacturers โ€” all required to have been on the market since 2016 โ€” to switch from tobacco-derived nicotine to synthetic nicotine. 

Of course, lawmakers โ€” who only seem to act promptly on vaping-related issues and little else โ€” introduced and passed legislation allowing the FDA to regulate synthetic nicotine as a tobacco product. As such, e-liquid and other vaping product manufacturers were required to submit a new PMTA by May 14, 2022,  to market their now-newly deemed tobacco products.

Throughout the entire process, the FDA has been bombarded by members of Congress, so-called public health groupsand anti-vaping campaigns to exert executive authority and enact a myriad of standards, including a ban on flavors and arbitrary nicotine levels.

One thing is sure in this entire PMTA process: the agency neglected science. Now, seemingly, science has had enough of it and is walking out the door in favor of a tobacco company that is more committed than the FDA to reducing the number of adults who smoke.

E-cigarettes and vaping devices are not the only tobacco harm reduction products available for adult consumers. Tobacco harm reduction โ€” the idea of consumers enjoying the benefits of nicotine without the harms associated with the burning of tobacco โ€” can be found in smokeless tobacco, snus and heated tobacco products.

Although the agency has been slow to authorize pending applications, the FDA does recognize that tobacco products exist on a continuum of harm, with combustible cigarettes being the most harmful and nicotine replacement therapies being the least harmful. After receiving marketing authorization through a PMTA (or another regulatory pathway), manufacturers can then apply for a modified risk tobacco product (MRTP) order. To date, the FDA has authorized only 14 MRTP orders.

Philip Morrisโ€™ heated tobacco product โ€” IQOS โ€” received a marketing order through the PMTA pathway, and an MRTP order. Unfortunately, due to a patent dispute, American adult tobacco consumers cannot buy the FDA-authorized IQOS. But, Philip Morrisโ€™ novel tobacco harm reduction product is causing steep declines in smoking rates in other parts of the world.

In Japan, heated tobacco products โ€” including IQOS โ€” have helped reduce the volume of cigarettes sold by 42 percent since 2016. Further, researchers at the American Cancer Society reported that the โ€œintroduction of IQOS likely reduced cigarette sales in Japan.โ€

While FDA may recognize tobacco harm reduction potential in products like IQOS, the agency still refuses to understand the data that indicates that adults use โ€” and enjoy โ€” flavors in e-cigarette products. The role of flavors helps adults quit smoking and remain smoke-free.

Since there were nearly 1 million flavored e-cigarette products that FDA issued denial orders, flavors are popular among adult e-cigarette users. This is also evidenced in several surveys and studies.

For example, a 2018 survey of nearly 70,000 American adult vapers โ€œfound flavors play a vital role in the use of electronic cigarettes and vaping devices,โ€ with 83.2 percent and 72.3 percent of survey respondents reporting vaping fruit and dessert flavors, respectively. Further, a 2020 study found an association between flavors and smoking cessation. In a cohort study of more than 17,900 participants, the authors found that โ€œadults who began vaping non-tobacco-flavored e-cigarettes were more likely to quit smoking than those who vaped tobacco flavors.

Regrettably, these studies donโ€™t seem to sway the FDA, which seems to be bowing down to lawmakersโ€™ wanton wishes, rather than examining the data and science and the sheer number of products in determining adult access to less harmful alternatives.

Holmanโ€™s departure from an agency that claims to want to reduce smoking to a tobacco company is more indicative of an underlying theme: tobacco and vaping companies are more committed to helping adults quit smoking than the FDA.



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