What can we learn from the American experience in bringing natural CBD food products and various supplements to the market?
In the United States, at the moment, there
is a situation in which , while preparing the regulatory framework for the
implementation of the pharmacological drug “Epidiolex” in the country,
government officials not only have a certain paradigm of thinking that needs to
be changed in the future in connection with the entry of natural cannabidiol
into the market, not in as a pharmaceutical raw material, but as a component of
food products or various additives. The main problem is that, while forming the
regulatory framework “for themselves”, pharmacologists introduce novelties into
the legislation, which further prevent the use of drug-free cannabinoids in
other extremely high-margin markets.
In order to understand the logic of the actions of state
structures that are the initiators of amending the current legislation, the editors
of the specialized electronic publication of national hemp growers are closely
monitoring the development of the situation around the regulation of the
legality of the use of natural cannabidiol as part of food or as a food
additive in the most highly developed country in the world . Understanding the
difficulties that US manufacturers face when they demand from the state
structures responsible for this issue actions aimed at regulating this type of
activity, as well as the arguments of officials why the issue is not being
resolved, it will be possible to initiate changes to the legal framework of
Ukraine over time in order to so that natural cannabidiol is legally sold in
our country as part of food products or as various additives (food, dietary, feed,
etc.).
According to US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) First
Deputy Commissioner Janet Woodcock, the above-mentioned government agency
concluded that “a separate regulatory framework for plant-based cannabidiol
(CBD) is needed that balances the desire of people to access CBD products with
the regulatory oversight needed to manage the risks.” This means that the FDA
does not consider the current regulatory framework for food and supplements to
be appropriate for plant-derived cannabidiol.
Among other things, based on the above findings, the FDA
denied three citizen petitions (the Consumer Health Products Association, the
Council for Responsible Nutrition, and the Natural Foods Association) that
asked the FDA to develop departmental documents that would allow cannabidiol to
be sold as a dietary supplement.
The FDA cites concerns about the safety of long-term use of
cannabidiol when it comes to liver function and the male reproductive system,
as well as the need for additional safeguards, such as CBD content limits and a
minimum age for purchase, to reduce the risk of ingestion by children.
"FDA food and supplement authorities have been given only limited tools to
manage the many risks associated with CBD products," Ms Woodcock said in a
statement. “According to the current regulatory framework, any substance,
including CBD, must meet certain safety standards in order to be legally sold
as a food or dietary supplement.”
In addition, the FDA rejects CBD as a dietary ingredient
because it is prohibited under current law because it is used as a drug. This
means that since drug companies are researching this non-narcotic cannabinoid
as a drug, it cannot be used as a dietary ingredient.
On the one hand, in the event that the regulatory framework
was adjusted accordingly, or the FDA changed its agency documents in order to
exempt CBD from the ban initiated by the pharmaceutical companies, nothing
should prevent plant-derived cannabidiol from entering the market. according to
the same rules as other “new ingredients”. On the other hand, as a result of
the FDA's findings, the recently initiated Cannabis Access and Consumer Safety
Act to exclude CBD and other hemp-derived cannabinoids from the no-drug clause
may become impossible.
In turn, the US hemp industry is strongly expressing its
disappointment with the FDA's opinion on this issue, disagreeing with its
statements about the lack of safety and reliability of the current regulatory
framework for plant cannabidiol.
“We were extremely disappointed by the FDA's announcement
that a separate regulatory framework is needed to regulate the use of CBD as a
food or dietary supplement. When it comes to CBD safety, the FDA is wrong.
Contrary to the FDA's constant claims that natural cannabidiol is unsafe, there
is clear, established evidence for the safety of its use over the years. CBD
products have been retailing for nearly a decade without any major safety
concerns. Interested cannabis businesses have met with the FDA and shared a
wide range of safety studies demonstrating that standard CBD dosage sizes are
safe, while the FDA continues to rely on pharmaceutical studies that show risk
at significantly higher doses that are not commonly found in Retail CBD
products," says Jonathan Miller, General Counsel for the USA Cannabis Roundtable
Project.
A number of brands have conducted toxicology studies for
independent GRAS (generally recognized as safe) opinions, including CV
Sciences, Hemp Fusion and Charlotte's Web, and Validcare has shared positive
results from its own safety studies with the FDA.
"It appears that no level of safety evidence will be
sufficient for the FDA," Steve Meester, president and chief executive
officer of CRN, said in a statement. “Over the past four years, the FDA has
repeatedly ignored the safety evidence that is relevant to CBD at levels
commonly used in supplements, and continues to rely heavily on the fictional
safety concerns associated with high doses of Epidiolex in order to explain
your inaction. The FDA has had enough time to review the scientific evidence
and develop regulations for CBD within the existing regulatory framework. Since
Congress passed the Farm Act of 2018, the inaction and indecision of the FDA
has undermined consumer interest in having safe and wholesome CBD products
available to them, allowing a gray market for CBD to emerge without sufficient
government oversight. ".
NPA President and CEO Daniel Fabrikant emphasizes that
“This is an astonishing dereliction of duty. After more than a decade of
promises, hearings, data sharing, and staffing, the FDA Office of Dietary
Supplements says it cannot do what Congress has authorized, which is to
regulate dietary supplements according to law."
Commentary of the specialists of the
Association “Ukrainian Industrial Hemp”
The skirmish between the FDA and lobbyists for the use of
natural cannabidiol in food or as various additives leads to the following
conclusions:
- US government officials, instead of regulating the
legality of working with plant cannabidiol in the United States, within their
powers, are only ready to state at the moment that this issue needs to be
considered;
- it is extremely difficult for government officials to
change their views, previously imposed on them by representatives of the
pharmacological business, that plant cannabidiol is not only a raw material for
the production of pharmacological preparations, but can be the basis for the
production of food or various kinds of additives with powerful therapeutic
potential;
- The FDA is rejecting plant-based CBD as a dietary
ingredient because it is banned under current law because it is already used as
a drug.
The main conclusion that can be drawn from what is currently happening in the United States regarding the regulation of the sale of natural cannabidiol as an ingredient in food products or various kinds of supplements is “whoever gets up first gets the slippers”. Those. Once again, the classic rule of the market is confirmed, according to which “the main prize goes to the one who enters the market first”. In other words, in the United States at the moment there is a situation in which , while preparing the regulatory framework for the implementation of the pharmacological drug “Epidiolex” in the country, government officials not only have a certain paradigm of thinking that needs to be further changed in connection with the entry into the market of natural cannabidiol not as a pharmaceutical raw material, but as a component of food or various kinds of supplements. The main problem is that, while forming the regulatory framework “for themselves”, pharmacologists introduce novelties into the legislation, which further prevent the use of drug-free cannabinoids in other extremely high-margin markets.

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