The US Food and Drug Administration and probiotics: Regulatory categorization

被引:51
|
作者
Degnan, Frederick H. [1 ]
机构
[1] King & Spalding, Washington, DC 20006 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1086/523324
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Probiotics are living microorganisms that, when consumed, have the potential to confer a beneficial health effect. Unfortunately for purveyors of probiotic products, the system of regulation delineated in the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act is anything but "one size fits all." How a probiotic product is used or is intended to be used will govern the regulatory category or categories that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will assign to the product. The extent and nature of the restraints and data-collection requirements that may be imposed on the marketing of a product hinge on how a product is categorized under the Act. More specifically, the categorization of a product governs the respective regulatory burdens of an industry sponsor and the FDA. Premarket systems, such as those for new drugs and biologics, place a heavy evidentiary burden on the sponsor of a product. Postmarket systems, such as those for dietary supplements, place, at least initially, a higher regulatory evidentiary burden on the FDA than on the product sponsor. This article explains regulatory categorizations under the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and their effects regarding the federal regulation of probiotic products.
引用
收藏
页码:S133 / S136
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Regulatory science within US Food and Drug Administration
    Patwardhan, Dinesh
    [J]. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2017, 254
  • [2] Regulatory Action on Rosiglitazone by the US Food and Drug Administration
    Woodcock, Janet
    Sharfstein, Joshua M.
    Hamburg, Margaret
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2010, 363 (16): : 1489 - 1491
  • [3] My career as a regulatory scientist at US Food and Drug Administration
    Jackson, Lauren
    [J]. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 255
  • [4] US Food and Drug Administration Regulatory Programs for Innovative Technologies
    Brodie, Frank
    Nguyen, Tieuvi
    Eydelman, Malvina
    [J]. JAMA OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2019, 137 (12) : 1349 - 1350
  • [5] Demystifying the US Food and Drug Administration: Understanding Regulatory Pathways
    Naghshineh, Nima
    Brown, Spencer
    Cederna, Paul S.
    Levi, Benjamin
    Lisiecki, Jeffrey
    D'Amico, Richard A.
    Hume, Keith M.
    Seward, William
    Rubin, J. Peter
    [J]. PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY, 2014, 134 (03) : 559 - 569
  • [6] US Food and Drug Administration regulations governing label claims for food products, including probiotics
    Saldanha, Leila G.
    [J]. CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2008, 46 : S119 - S121
  • [7] US Food and Drug Administration regulatory updates in neuro-oncology
    Mehta, Gautam U.
    Barone, Amy K.
    Bradford, Diana
    Larkins, Erin
    Kim, Janice
    Pai-Scherf, Lee
    Jaigirdar, Adnan
    Shah, Mirat
    Wedam, Suparna
    Amiri-Kordestani, Laleh
    Theoret, Marc R.
    Pazdur, Richard
    Beaver, Julia A.
    Singh, Harpreet
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2021, 153 (03) : 375 - 381
  • [8] The clinical pharmacogeneticist: An emerging regulatory scientist at the US Food and Drug Administration
    Issam Zineh
    Janet Woodcock
    [J]. Human Genomics, 4 (4)
  • [9] US Food and Drug Administration - A science-based regulatory agency
    Schwetz, BA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AOAC INTERNATIONAL, 2001, 84 (01) : 171 - 175
  • [10] US Food and Drug Administration regulatory approaches for xenotransplantation products and xenografts
    Arcidiacono, Judith
    [J]. XENOTRANSPLANTATION, 2020, 27 (06) : CP5 - U7