U. S. Food and Drug Administration
Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
November 30, 1999


FDA's Strategy to Implement the Pearson v. Shalala Court Decision

Dear Colleague Letter
Federal Register Notice

Dear Colleague, FDA Foods Community:

Attached for your information is a Federal Register notice that went on public display today informing the public of FDA's strategy to implement the recent court decision in Pearson v. Shalala. The components of the strategy are to: (1) Update the scientific evidence on the four claims at issue in Pearson; (2) issue guidance clarifying the "significant scientific agreement" standard; (3) hold a public meeting to solicit input on what changes to FDA's general health claim regulations for dietary supplements may be warranted in light of the Pearson decision; (4) conduct a rulemaking to reconsider the general health claims regulations for dietary supplements in light of the Pearson decision; and (5) conduct rulemakings on the four Pearson health claims. In this notice, FDA is also announcing how it plans to process petitions for dietary supplement health claims during the interim implementation period.

Developing this strategy was one of the "boulders" we pledged to accomplish this calendar year. We look forward to working with you as we continue to involve our stakeholders on this important issue.

  Sincerely yours,

Joseph A. Levitt
Director
Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition


[Federal Register: December 1, 1999 (Volume 64, Number 230)]
[Notices]
[Page 67289-67291]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr01de99-78]
 
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
 
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket Nos. 91N-0101, 91N-0098, 91N-0103, and 91N-100H]
 
 
Food Labeling: Health Claims and Label Statements for Dietary
Supplements; Strategy for Implementation of Pearson Court Decision
 
AGENCY:Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
 
ACTION:Notice.
 
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SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is informing the public
of its strategy to implement a recent court decision in Pearson v.
Shalala (Pearson). The agency is taking this action to ensure that
interested persons are aware of the steps it plans to follow to carry
out the decision. FDA is also announcing how it plans to process
petitions for dietary supplement health claims during the interim
implementation period.
 
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marquita B. Steadman, Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition (HFS-007), Food and Drug Administration,
5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20852, 301-827-6733.
 
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
 
I. Background
 
    On January 15, 1999, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
issued its decision in Pearson v. Shalala, 164 F.3d 650 (D.C. Cir.
1999). In Pearson, the plaintiffs had challenged FDA's health claim
regulations for dietary supplements and FDA's decision not to authorize
health claims for four specific nutrient-disease relationships: Dietary
fiber and cancer, antioxidant vitamins and cancer, omega-3 fatty acids
and coronary heart disease, and the claim that 0.8 mg of folic acid in
dietary supplement form is more effective in
 
[[Page 67290]]
 
reducing the risk of neural tube defects than a lower amount in
conventional food form.
    The court held in Pearson that, on the administrative record
compiled in the challenged rulemakings, the first amendment does not
permit FDA to reject health claims that the agency determines to be
potentially misleading unless the agency also reasonably determines
that no disclaimer would eliminate the potential deception.
Accordingly, the court invalidated the regulations prohibiting the four
health claims listed above and directed the agency to reconsider
whether to authorize the claims. The court further held that the
Administrative Procedure Act requires FDA to clarify the ``significant
scientific agreement'' standard for authorizing health claims, either
by issuing a regulatory definition of significant scientific agreement
or by defining it on a case-by-case basis.
    The Government filed a petition for rehearing en banc
(reconsideration by the full court of appeals). The U.S. Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit denied the petition for rehearing on April
2, 1999.
    After the petition for rehearing was denied, FDA's Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition updated its 1999 Program Priorities
document to state that developing a strategy to implement the Pearson
decision would be a high priority for calendar year 1999.
 
II. Components of the Implementation Strategy
 
    The components of the strategy are to: (1) Update the scientific
evidence on the four claims at issue in Pearson; (2) issue guidance
clarifying the ``significant scientific agreement'' standard; (3) hold
a public meeting to solicit input on changes to FDA's general health
claim regulations for dietary supplements that may be warranted in
light of the Pearson decision; (4) conduct a rulemaking to reconsider
the general health claims regulations for dietary supplements in light
of the Pearson decision; and (5) conduct rulemakings on the four
Pearson health claims. Because of FDA's obligation to implement the
court decision promptly, the agency intends to work on the components
of the strategy concurrently whenever possible. As noted above,
implementation of Pearson is one of the items on the Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition's (CFSAN's) 1999 Program Priorities list,
which constitutes CFSAN's priority work plan for the year, and CFSAN
will include Pearson implementation as one of its high priority items
for fiscal year 2000.
 
III. Updating the Scientific Evidence on the Four Pearson Claims
 
    As a first step toward re-examining the evidence supporting the
four claims at issue in Pearson, FDA published a notice in the Federal
Register of September 8, 1999 (64 FR 48841), requesting that interested
persons submit any available scientific data concerning the substance-
disease relationships that are the subject of the four claims. In that
notice, FDA requested that written comments be submitted to the agency
by November 22, 1999. In addition, CFSAN entered into a contract with a
nongovernment firm to conduct a literature review for the four claims
to identify relevant scientific information that became available after
the agency's initial 1990 to 1993 review of these claims. This data
gathering and literature review is needed for FDA to determine the
current nature of the scientific evidence relating to the four claims
and is an essential step in re-considering the claims. The contracted
literature review for the four claims is due to the agency this fall.
    In response to a request from several of the Pearson plaintiffs,
the agency has agreed to extend or reopen the comment period on the
September 8, 1999, notice for 75 days after the agency issues its
guidance on the significant scientific agreement standard (described
below). The agency will give careful consideration to any additional
data it receives during the second 75-day comment period.
 
IV. Guidance on the Significant Scientific Agreement Standard
 
    The agency is preparing to issue guidance clarifying the meaning of
the significant scientific agreement standard. FDA expects to issue
such guidance before the end of calendar year 1999.
 
V. Rulemakings and Public Meeting
 
    FDA is planning to initiate several rulemakings in response to
Pearson. First, the court's decision requires the agency to reconsider
whether to authorize the four claims that were at issue in the case.
The agency intends to conduct four rulemakings, one for each claim. In
each instance, the agency will first evaluate whether the evidence
supporting the claim meets the significant scientific agreement
standard; if not, the agency will then proceed to consider whether
there is any qualifying language that could render the claim
nonmisleading. If FDA believes that the answer to either question is
yes, the agency will propose to authorize the claim; otherwise, the
agency will propose not to authorize it.
    Second, FDA intends to initiate rulemaking to consider changes to
its general health claims regulations for dietary supplements that may
be warranted in light of Pearson. A public meeting during the first
quarter of calendar year 2000 will precede this rulemaking. FDA will
publish a Federal Register notice announcing the date and location of
the public meeting. In that notice, FDA will provide a list of topics
or questions to focus public input on how the agency's approach to the
regulation of health claims for dietary supplements could be changed in
light of Pearson.
    Written comments received in response to the notice, and
participation at the public meeting, will assist the agency in the
rulemaking to reconsider its general health claims regulations for
dietary supplements.
 
VI. Interim Process for Petitions
 
    Until the rulemaking to reconsider the general health claims
regulations for dietary supplements is complete, FDA intends to deny,
without prejudice, any petition for a dietary supplement health claim
that does not meet the significant scientific agreement standard in 21
CFR Sec. 101.14(c). Once the rulemaking is complete, the agency will,
on its own initiative, reconsider any petitions denied during the
interim period. Petitions will be reconsidered in the order they were
originally received. This process does not apply to the four claims at
issue in Pearson, which will be handled as previously described.
    FDA takes seriously its obligation to implement Pearson. The agency
believes that the fastest and most efficient way to fully implement the
decision is to conduct a rulemaking to reconsider the general
procedures and standards governing health claims for dietary
supplements before ruling on individual petitions that do not meet the
current regulatory standard for health claim authorization. If the
agency attempted to proceed case-by-case without establishing a
regulatory framework applicable to all petitions, confusion among
regulatees, inconsistent agency action, and waste of private and agency
resources could result.
    This practice is consistent with the practice FDA adopted
immediately following the passage of the Nutrition Labeling and
Education Act of 1990, which provided explicit statutory authority for
health claims on conventional foods and dietary supplements. In a
Federal Register notice
 
[[Page 67291]]
 
published March 14, 1991 (56 FR 10906), the agency announced that it
would deny, without prejudice, any health claim petition that was
submitted before issuance of final regulations concerning the
submission and content of such petitions.
 
    Dated: November 23, 1999.
Margaret M. Dotzel,
Acting Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 99-31122 Filed 11-30-99; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-01-F



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