U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation and Research |
Guidance Document |
Guidance for Industry
Street Drug Alternatives U.S. Department of Health and Human Services [Acrobat Version of this Document] Additional copies of this Guidance
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Street Drug Alternatives
This guidance is intended for those persons who are manufacturing, marketing, or distributing alternatives to illicit street drugs. FDA considers any product that is promoted as a street drug alternative to be an unapproved new drug and a misbranded drug in violation of sections 505 and 502 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the Act). Such violations may result in regulatory action, including seizure and injunction. II. BACKGROUND The Agency has become aware of the proliferation of various products that are being manufactured, marketed, or distributed as alternatives to illicit street drugs (street drug alternatives). FDA is concerned that these products are being abused by individuals, including minors, and pose a potential threat to the public health. Street drug alternatives are generally labeled as containing botanicals, and some are also labeled as containing other ingredients, such as vitamins, minerals, or amino acids. They are marketed under a variety of brand names with claims implying that these products mimic the effects of controlled substances. Many of these products are promoted on the Internet and in counterculture magazines as alternatives to illicit street drugs such as MDMA (4-methyl-2, dimethoxyamphetamine), a methamphetamine analogue, also known as ecstasy, XTC, and X. Other examples of products whose names imply street drug alternative use are e-Ludes, Hextacy, and Herbal Koke. These products are intended to be used for recreational purposes to effect psychological states (e.g., to get high, to promote euphoria, or to induce hallucinations) and have potential for abuse. FDA considers these street drug alternatives to be unapproved new drugs and misbranded drugs under sections 505 and 502 of the Act. FDA is also aware that some of these street drug alternatives are being marketed as dietary supplements. FDA does not consider street drug alternatives to be dietary supplements. The term dietary supplement as defined in section 201(ff) of the Act means, inter alia, a product "intended to supplement the diet." While the Act does not elaborate on the meaning of this phrase, many congressional findings, set forth in the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994, suggest that dietary supplements are intended to be used to augment the diet to promote health and reduce the risk of disease. FDA does not believe that street drug alternatives are intended to be used to augment the diet to promote health or reduce the risk of disease. Moreover, FDA considers the diet to be composed of usual food and drink that may be designed to meet specific nutritional requirements. Illicit street drugs are not food or drink, and neither they, nor alternative street drugs, can be said to supplement the diet. Rather, these products are intended to be used for recreational purposes to effect psychological states (e.g., to get high, to promote euphoria, or to induce hallucinations). Accordingly, street drug alternatives are not intended to supplement the diet and are not dietary supplements. This position is consistent with that set forth at 62 Fed. Reg. 30678, 30699-700 (June 4, 1997). III. POLICY FDA considers any product that is promoted as a street drug alternative to be an unapproved new drug and a misbranded drug in violation of sections 505 and 502 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Such violations may result in regulatory action, including seizure and injunction
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