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New NDI “Grandfathering” Bill

Dietary Supplements,FDA,Regulatory

Will Congress exempt Pre-Jan. 2007 Dietary Supplements from New Dietary Ingredient (NDI) Regulations?

Rep. Dan Burton

Although we don’t yet know whether this legislation has any legs, on November 4th Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.) proposed the H R 3380 – Burton, a bill that would grandfather tens of thousands of dietary supplement ingredients that have been marketed since the passage of DSHEA (October 15, 1994) up to January 1, 2007, effectively “reclassifying” their NDI status.  Recognizing that industry practices, including the cGMP’s, Adverse Event Reporting, and voluntary product auditing and testing for quality and purity, have improved dietary supplement safety for consumers, the bill highlights that fact that corresponding FDA policy remained unchanged. The bill seeks to amend section 413(d) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (“FDC Act”) to expand the definition of a new dietary ingredient, because the FDC Act “does not recognize the current safe market in supplements, nor how intensively supplements have been regulated over the 17 years since enactment of DSHEA to protect public health and safety, and should be updated to reflect this reality.” We will be following the progress of this legislation in hopes that it will gain momentum and support from industry, and ultimately, from Congress.

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