New supplement rules tacked on to bill authorizing FDA fees

The bill comes out of the Senate HELP (Health, Education, Labor and Pensions) Committee and bears the names of Chair Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) and Ranking Member Sen. Richard Burr, (R-NC).

Called the FDA Safety and Landmark Advancements (FDASLA) Act, the bill reauthorizes FDA’s prescription drug, generic drug, biosimilar, and medical device user fee agreements.  Significantly,  however, it is also contains provisions meant, in Sen. Murray’s words, to “provide long overdue oversight of cosmetics and dietary supplements.”​

Such fee reauthorization bills are generally boilerplate affairs that generate little to no controversy. Indeed a House reauthorization bill, which does not contain dietary supplement provisions, passed yesterday on a 392-28 vote. 

Bill sets out new listing requirements, makes other changes

That’s why some in the industry have viewed with concern the tacking on of the supplement provisions into a bill that’s sure to pass in one form or another.  It’s something akin to the practice of trying to slip in not very closely related riders into bills funding basic Federal government operations, which must be passed at some point.

The portions of the bill aimed at dietary supplements would require manufacturers to submit a listing of the product to FDA prior to going to market.  The bill has eight individual citations relating to this requirement.  Products that don’t comply with the listing requirement would be judged to be misbranded.

 In addition the bill would direct FDA to publish final guidance on New Dietary Ingredients within 18 months. It also delineates two additional prohibited acts.  One would be to market a supplement that contains an ingredient that “does not meet the definition of a dietary supplement” ​ The other would be for someone who has been debarred from the industry to market a supplement. The Senate is set to consider its version of the bill on June 14.  The current FDA fee authorization expires at the end of September, and lawmakers have said they want a new version in place before the August recess.

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