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http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=18020

 

 

The FDA Eyes Your Garden

 

By Frank Lampe, Conscious Choice

March 2, 2004

 

Even before the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), released its final ruling on

the herb ephedra, banning it for sale after April 12, the feeding frenzy had

begun.

 

 

 

Many see the FDA's action to prohibit the sale of ephedra, or ma huang as it's

also known, as the opening salvo of an attack on all supplements, especially

botanicals, and the landmark law that protects them, 1994's Dietary Supplement

Health and Education Act (DSHEA). They fear that if the supplement act is

overhauled or rescinded, millions of consumers may be denied access to what are

mostly safe, effective and inexpensive wellness enhancers and alternatives to

prescription drugs.

 

 

 

" We're not saying, 'don't sell them.' We're saying, 'don't sell them over the

counter.' Regulate them as you regulate prescriptions. " So said Rep. John

Sweeney, (R-NY), at a Feb. 3 press conference announcing an initiative to extend

the ephedra ban to what he and Sen. Charles Schumer, (D-NY) called 'copycat'

formulations to ephedra. Rep. Sweeney said that " Congress made a mistake " when

it passed DSHEA. Sen. Schumer added that if FDA fails to act, " We will move

legislation in this regard. "

 

 

 

While critics say that the products are unregulated or underregulated and pose

untold risks to the health of a nation, another group, advocates of alternative

and complementary medicine, sees supplements as the cornerstone of a rational

and overdue approach to healthcare. The national healthcare system currently

consumes 15 percent of the nation's overall spending – higher than any other

industrialized country. And even as insurance companies continue the upward

spiral of annual rate increases, 40 percent of the citizens in the richest

country on earth are without basic healthcare coverage.

 

 

 

Ephedra sinica. Love it or hate it, use it or not, no dietary supplement has

raised the hackles of and polarized so many consumers, government officials,

politicians, scientists and the industry that sells it. Additionally, no

supplement has ever been so misrepresented, attacked and slandered in mainstream

media. And while the door on ephedra is closing, the face-off in this complex

and emotionally charged story continues.

 

 

 

Curiously, the ban on ephedra will not affect the sale of over-the-counter and

prescription drugs containing the herb's synthetically derived active compound

ephedrine, which is used in decongestants and other bronchial remedies such as

Sudafed.

 

 

 

An Old Familiar Feeling

 

 

 

This situation looks strangely similar to the agency's 1990 banning of the amino

acid L-tryptophan. This then-popular dietary supplement, used to relieve

depression, anxiety and PMS, as well as to control pain and induce natural

sleep, was implicated – and then cleared – in the deaths of a number of users in

the U.S. in 1989. Investigators found that a faulty manufacturing process at a

Showa Denko facility in Japan was responsible for a contamination of the

product, which caused a deadly flu-like condition called Eosinophilia-Myalgia

Syndrome (EMS).

 

 

 

Surprisingly, L-tryptophan is still available by prescription, but at a much

higher cost, and it has been used, uninterrupted, in baby formulas and animal

feed since the 1989 incident. In fact, in 1993, a U.S. patent was issued to use

L-tryptophan to treat and cure EMS, the same condition that prompted the FDA to

take L-tryptophan off the market in the first place. Go figure.

 

 

 

Now, some observers are looking suspiciously at the 2002 FDA approval of Eli

Lilly's drug, Strattera, a non-stimulant drug, which is used to treat Attention

Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Psychiatrists, who have been increasingly

diagnosing adults with ADHD, have typically treated them with stimulants.

According to an article in the October 2002 issue of Current Psychology,

stimulants produce significant improvement in 30 percent of patients and mixed

results in another 40 percent. Ephedra, of course, is such a stimulant.

 

 

 

In its Feb. 6 ruling, FDA provided what it says is a blueprint for how the

agency intends to regulate supplements in the future and remove from the market

those that it considers " an unreasonable risk " to public safety. While it's too

early to tell exactly how the agency will implement its new strategy (the final

ruling was released right at press time), a few indicators don't bode well for

the industry or consumers.

 

 

 

During a speech at the University of Mississippi in January, FDA Commissioner

Mark McClellan said: " We will be doing more work in the coming months to more

closely evaluate the potential safety risk of these products, and we could take

further action to remove unsafe dietary supplements from the market. " On the hit

list: bitter orange, aristolochic acid and usnic acid – all used for weight

loss, and chaparral, comfrey, willow bark and wormwood. No one knows what might

be next.

 

 

 

The ban of ephedra marks the first time the agency has removed a dietary

supplement under the supplement act, DSHEA passed by Congress after many years

of contentious, often hostile clashes from the two opposing sides of the

supplements issue. Through the spirited actions of citizen-based advocacy

groups, industry companies and health food store retailers, hundreds of

thousands of consumers communicated with their congressional representatives in

the early '90s demanding continued, unfettered access to dietary supplements.

The outpouring was unprecedented at the time, eclipsing everything but

commentary over the Vietnam War years earlier.

 

 

 

In passing the DSHEA, Congress stated that there may be a positive relationship

between sound dietary practice and good health, and although further scientific

research is needed, there may be a connection between dietary supplement use,

reduced healthcare expenses and disease prevention.

 

 

 

At the time of its passage, President Clinton said about DSHEA (pronounced

" da-shay " for shorthand): " After several years of intense efforts,

manufacturers, experts in nutrition, and legislators, acting in a conscientious

alliance with consumers at the grassroots level, have moved successfully to

bring common sense to the treatment of dietary supplements under regulation and

law. "

 

 

 

The legislation, in essence, amended the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of

1938 to alter the way dietary supplements are regulated and labeled. DSHEA, for

the first time, created a legal definition for dietary supplements as foods and

not drugs. The law also allowed specific, science-based structure/function

claims on supplement labels, which enabled manufacturers (for the first time) to

educate consumers about the health benefits of the products as they related to

particular health conditions.

 

 

 

The passage of DSHEA was to mark the beginning of a golden era for supplements

and natural health. Ten years later, that dream has crumbled.

 

 

 

Risks and Benefits

 

 

 

In trying to understand the heated and often contentious debate on ephedra,

supplements in general and the viability of DSHEA, one must understand what

everyone involved refers to as the " benefit-to-risk ratio " of consumer products

as they relate to public health policy. In the case of ephedra, FDA determined

that the herb, traditionally used to help alleviate allergy and asthma symptoms

for more than 5,000 years, but now used mostly for weight loss, energy and

performance enhancement, had no health benefits and created grave risks to

public health – primarily increased blood pressure that could lead to heart

failure and disease.

 

 

 

At a news conference announcing the upcoming ephedra ban, Health and Human

Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said government scientists had concluded

ephedra-based supplements " are simply too risky to be used. "

 

 

 

By comparison, the agency's stand on pharmaceutical drugs is that the benefits

outweigh the risks because of all of the supposed safety research that is

required before drugs are released for public consumption. That hasn't stopped

the agency from releasing, and then recalling, a number of these purported

" proven " substances.

 

 

 

A report commissioned by FDA in 2003 and cited in its final ruling found that

only five deaths could be directly attributed to the use of ephedra. Yet, media

reports and supplements opponents, including the New York legislators mentioned

above, quote the number of deaths attributed to ephedra use at 155. According to

a report from the American Herbal Products Association (AHPA), 12 million to 17

million people in 1999 consumed approximately 3 billion servings of ephedra

products.

 

 

 

On the other hand, according to the Journal of the American Medical Association,

overmedication and adverse reactions to pharmaceutical drugs in hospitals killed

106,000 people in 1994. And this doesn't include the number killed outside of

hospitals or those deaths that went unreported. It is estimated that aspirin

kills 1,000 people per year. And last year, allergic reactions to peanuts killed

nearly 100. Apparently, the benefit-to-risk ratio of these products, both the

domain of DSHEA, is OK.

 

 

 

Contrary to DSHEA's contention in its final ruling, a good amount of scientific

research shows that if taken according to label directions and strict dosage

limitations (a maximum of 90-100 mg per day), ephedra is safe. As Mike Fillon,

author of Ephedra Fact & Fiction (Woodland Publishing, 2003), points out, many

of the deaths popularly attributed to the herb involved significant additional

factors, making it unlikely ephedra was the main culprit.

 

 

 

It's true that not all products are safe for everyone. Just as all human beings

are distinctly unique, with different physical and mental attributes, their

physiologies differ, too. Some people are allergic to or can't tolerate certain

foods, such as nuts, dairy or corn, to name but a few. This is also true of some

drugs and dietary supplements. It's a no-brainer that consumers who are pregnant

or have a history of high blood pressure or heart attacks should not take

ephedra. And responsible supplements companies have indicated this on their

labels for years.

 

 

 

" Ephedra is symbolic of a bigger issue, and that is how we look at the 'assured

benefit' vs. the 'acceptable risk,' " says Jim Turner, a Washington-based

attorney, who is chair of the board of consumer-advocacy group Citizens For

Health (CFH) and the Campaign for Better Health, a project of CFH. " The

government has come in with a no benefit/high risk position and is now trying to

spread that position to other supplements – it's guilt by association. This is

bad public policy from the consumer point of view.

 

 

 

" The problem is that there is no way to divide the world of products that are

safe and effective and unsafe and ineffective for everyone, " Turner adds. " Every

product will have some positives and some negatives. "

 

 

 

Turner says a better approach would be a post-marketing, post-approval

surveillance system for both pharmaceuticals and supplements to get the highest

benefit-to-risk ratios at a reasonable cost. Such a system would create an early

warning system, he says, that would quickly weed out problem products. Failure

to implement some workable system will ultimately bankrupt the country, as

according to estimates Turner quotes, at the current pace, 40 percent of the

country's gross spending will be on healthcare by 2050.

 

 

 

A Biased Media

 

 

 

Adding yet more fuel to the fire in this debate is mainstream media, which has

overwhelmingly taken an anti-supplement stance in its coverage of ephedra.

Repeated claims in media outlets such as the New York Times, The New Yorker,

Associated Press and others that the industry or a particular supplement product

is " unregulated " by FDA are simply false. FDA has always had the power to remove

unsafe products from the market.

 

 

 

Not that certain members of Congress have heard the message. At least five bills

are currently floating around the hallowed halls of Congress that would severely

impact the viability of DSHEA. The most onerous of them, inappropriately named

The Dietary Supplement Safety Act (S 722), introduced by Sen. Richard Durbin,

(D-IL), could restrict access to whole classes of supplements because of only

one adverse event report, without proof that a dietary supplement was the cause

of the adverse event (remember L-tryptophan?). In addition, the legislation

would essentially halt investment in scientific research to prove the health

benefits of supplements.

 

 

 

The good news is that Washington insiders report that Durbin's bill has no

chance of passage in this session of Congress. But there's always next year, and

the year after that.

 

 

 

Both FDA Commissioner McClellan and his boss, HHS Secretary Thompson, have made

it clear that DSHEA is not sacrosanct. At the December 30 news conference

announcing the impending ephedra ban, McClellan said: " I do think that when FDA

reaches a conclusion like this, we ought to be able to carry it out to provide

the protection that Americans need. And we will be doing our best to defend this

in court. And if that's not sufficient, it may be time to re-examine the act. "

 

 

 

And Thompson said in response to a question, " I've already indicated that I

would like to see the law changed, "

 

 

 

Not everyone thinks DSHEA needs to be altered, however. Sen. Orrin Hatch,

(R-UT), a staunch supplements supporter and a key sponsor of the original DSHEA

legislation, last year introduced – with fellow supplements advocate and DSHEA

sponsor Sen. Tom Harkin, (D-IA) – The DSHEA Full Implementation Act (S 1538).

This legislation would give FDA the federal funding it says it needs to fully

implement and enforce DSHEA, specifically, an adverse event reporting system,

improved health claims analysis and the ability to enforce good manufacturing

practices.

 

 

 

" DSHEA is a strong law that properly implemented will protect the interests of

consumers, " Hatch told a Senate committee in October. " The law gives the FDA

abundant tools to remove products that are unsafe from the market.

 

 

 

" In the nine-plus years since DSHEA was enacted, there has been too much talk

that the law handcuffs FDA and too little effort to apply the law. It is

impossible for this law to protect consumers if it is not enforced, " Hatch

added.

 

 

 

With ephedra, it appears that FDA is finally enforcing the law – at least its

version of the law. The rest could well be up to the courts, as lawsuits and

legal challenges are likely. And like most legal matters, it's all in the

interpretation.

 

 

 

Meanwhile, the supplements industry and millions of consumers are collectively

holding their breath waiting to see how FDA will use its legal authority to

regulate supplements in the future. The fate of many products may hang in the

balance. " If it's based on sound scientific principles and based on law, we'll

support it, " said Michael McGuffin, president of AHPA, just a few days before

the final ruling was released.

 

 

 

Ana Micka, president and CEO of CFH and the Campaign for Better Health presents

yet another viewpoint: " In spite of the high usage of supplements (more than 30

percent of the population) and alternative health (more than 40 percent) in the

U.S., it's not a visible community and not a block of voters.

 

 

 

" There are definitely competing voices in politics, and right now we're not a

loud, dominant voice. We have to do a lot of work as a community to organize and

present our views for new health and wellness solutions in this country. "

 

 

 

This story originally appeared in the March issues of the Dragonfly Media

publications (www.dragonflymedia.com)

 

 

 

 

 

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