Reposted from Keller and Heckman’s Blog, The Daily Intake
- On January 15, 2021, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued warning lettersto ten companies that sell electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) products, including e-liquids. FDA’s letters warned that any new tobacco product not in compliance with the premarket authorization requirements of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, as amended by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, is adulterated and misbranded, and may not be marketed without FDA authorization.
- By way of background, the premarket tobacco product application (PMTA) process ensures that new tobacco products will undergo a scientific evaluation by FDA to ensure that such products are appropriate for the protection of the public health. Certain new tobacco products (,ENDS on the market as of August 8, 2016, the effective date of FDA’s “Deeming Rule”) were required to complete and submit PMTAs by September 9, 2020 – a deadline established as a result of a federal district court order. In compliance with that court’s order, FDA stated that companies that submitted applications by the deadline are allowed to continue selling those products for up to a year (i.e., until September 9, 2021), unless FDA rejects the PMTA filing, or uses its enforcement discretion to allow products sufficiently far along in the review process to remain on the market on a case-by-case basis. On January 19, 2021, four months after the submission deadline, FDA finalized its long-awaited “foundational rule” on PMTAs.
- FDA also emphasizedthat it would continue to prioritize enforcement against companies that have not submitted a PMTA and that market ENDS, including e-cigarettes and products with a likelihood of youth use or initiation (g., cartridge or pod-based ENDS).
- FDA requested that each company respond within 15 days of receiving the letter detailing how it will address FDA’s concerns, including the dates on which the company discontinued the sale and/or distribution of the tobacco products, and its plans for maintaining compliance. FDA stated that the failure to address violations may result in a civil money penalty, seizure, and/or injunction.
To learn more about this and other FDA enforcement-related topics, be sure to register now for Keller and Heckman’s virtual E-Vapor and Tobacco Law Symposium on February 9-11, 2021.