FDA proposes new office combining ‘food chemical safety’ with ‘supplements’
Why are dietary supplements now placed in the same office as food additives, asked United Natural Products Alliance President Loren Israelsen about the new agency proposal.
An FDA proposal to create an office that incorporates food chemical safety and dietary supplement activities has drawn concern from industry trade associations whose members produce and sell supplements.
In announcing the creation of an “Office of Dietary Supplement Programs” in December 2015, the Food and Drug Administration predicted the action would improve “the effectiveness of dietary supplement regulation.”
In emails to Natural Products Insider, the heads of industry trade groups have expressed concerns that FDA’s new proposal will undermine the benefits of an independent dietary supplement office. Last week, FDA proposed the creation of an “Office of Food Chemical Safety, Dietary Supplements and Innovation” as part of its proposal for a unified human foods program.
“The Office of Food Chemical Safety, Dietary Supplements and Innovation will work to modernize and strengthen oversight of food chemical safety, advance dietary supplement safety, and enable the HFP [human foods program] to support and effectively regulate food ingredient innovation,” FDA stated in a proposed human foods program organization chart that it released on June 27.
FDA had no immediate details to share for this story when asked how the proposed office would impact its regulation of dietary supplement products.
“More information will be released in the coming months on the proposal, but we don’t have anything additional to add at this time,” an agency spokesperson said.
FDA in late 2015 announced elevating its dietary supplement division to an office. In a constituent update at the time, FDA said the move would “raise the profile of dietary supplements within the agency and will enhance the effectiveness of dietary supplement regulation by allowing ODSP to better compete for government resources and capabilities to regulate this rapidly expanding industry.”
Reaction to proposed FDA unified human foods program
FDA’s proposal for a unified human foods program—including the creation of an office combining food chemical safety, supplements and innovation—was unveiled after the agency requested an independent evaluation of its human foods program. The Reagan-Udall Foundation report excluded dietary supplements, an issue that trade associations asked about during a meeting in January with FDA officials to discuss the human foods program.
United Natural Products Alliance (UNPA) President Loren Israelsen described as “highly unusual” FDA excluding dietary supplements from its request to the Reagan-Udall Foundation for an evaluation of the human foods program. Dietary supplements are a special category of foods under U.S. law.
Israelsen, who was one of the trade association execs who met with FDA officials on Jan. 3 to discuss the human foods program, said FDA failed to provide a “satisfactory answer” when asked why supplements were excluded. In a Jan. 18 Natural Products Insider article that reported on the meeting, FDA declined to comment about the Reagan-Udall Foundation report excluding supplements.
“Our question remains open, and [we] invite the FDA to explain its reasoning to our industry,” Israelsen said.