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. 2018;59(6):1933-1982.
Epub 2018 Jul 11.

Closing the Regulatory Gap for Synthetic Nicotine Products

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Closing the Regulatory Gap for Synthetic Nicotine Products

Patricia J Zettler et al. Boston Coll Law Rev. 2018.

Abstract

In July 2017 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced a new "comprehensive plan for tobacco and nicotine regulation." This plan is focused on making cigarettes less addictive while facilitating the development of alternative, and less-harmful, nicotine-containing products. This approach holds promise, and the public health stakes could not be higher-smoking is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States, resulting in roughly 480,000 deaths per year. But a new consumer product is emerging that could upset the FDA's plans for a well-balanced regulatory scheme: synthetic nicotine. These products currently fall into a regulatory gap because they fall outside the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act's (FDCA) definition of a tobacco product. If this gap remains in place, it is likely that more companies will exploit it in order to evade regulation, undoing the potential benefits of the FDA's plan for tobacco and nicotine regulation. This Article argues that the FDA can, and should, address this problem by regulating synthetic nicotine products as drugs. After reviewing the science of nicotine addiction and the FDA's past and present regulatory schemes for nicotine, it explains how the FDA could establish that synthetic nicotine products satisfy the FDCA's definition of a drug. It concludes with a discussion of the policy benefits of categorizing synthetic nicotine products as drugs.

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References

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    1. Gottlieb Scott. Commissioner, U.S. Food & Drug Admin., Protecting American Families: Comprehensive Approach to Nicotine and Tobacco (prepared remarks) 2017 Jul 28; https://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Speeches/ucm569024.htm (emphasis added).
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