Tag: news

  • Turning Point, 2 Other Firms Sue FDA Over Market Denials

    Turning Point, 2 Other Firms Sue FDA Over Market Denials

    At least three suits stemming from marketing denial orders (MDOs) issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in response to premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) have been filed in the 2nd, 6th and 11th circuits courts of appeals (possibly more) against the FDA. Turning Point Brands (TPB) filed first a petition for review (a statutory review) with the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. TPB then filed an emergency motion to stay the FDAs order to remove TPB’s products from the market. Bidi Vapor and at least one other company have filed similar suits.

    Credit: Vitalii Vodolazskyi

    The TPB petition forced the FDA to provide an administrative record for its decisions on PMTAs. TPB sells various flavored e-liquids marketed under the Solace, VaporFi and Vapor Shark brands. TPB is now asking the court to review the FDA order “on the grounds that it is arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, contrary to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, as amended by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of 2009, and otherwise not in accordance with law.” The company requests the court “vacate or modify” the FDA order and asks that TPB be allowed to “continue to market the products subject to the challenged order.”

    In an explanation for its actions, the FDA’s director for its Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), Mitch Zeller, stated in a release that many of the accepted applications ultimately received an RTF letter at the filing stage of the review process because the application did not include required information. “For example, companies received RTF letters for not including required content such as ingredient listings, labels for each product to be marketed, or adequate environmental assessments,” he wrote.

    In a joint news release with Zeller and acting FDA commissioner Janet Woodcock, the FDA explained that the applications from many MDO recipients “lacked sufficient evidence that they have a benefit to adult smokers sufficient to overcome the public health threat posed by the levels of youth use” of electronic nicotine-delivery systems (ENDS) products.

    The PMTAs submitted by TPB and denied by MDO included an in-depth toxicological review, a clinical study, and studies on patterns and likelihood of use, according to the motion to stay filed by TPB on Sept. 30. The stay contained responses from the FDA’s response to TPB’s petition for review. “TPB’s studies demonstrated that TPB’s products help adult smokers transition away from riskier traditional cigarettes. Those studies confirmed that youth users do not currently purchase TPB products and there is virtually zero likelihood that they will in the future,” the motion states.

    TPB accuses the FDA of moving the goalposts for data needed to receive a marketing order based on what the agency “learned” from the “review [of] PMTAs for flavored ENDS so far,” according to the stay. TPB noted that the “North Star of administrative law” is that agencies cannot induce regulated parties to rely on “agency representations about regulatory requirements,” then penalize them using the previously unannounced criteria after-the-fact.

    “But that is precisely what FDA did here,” the stay motion states. “[The] FDA reasoned that TPB failed to conduct ‘a randomized controlled trial and/or longitudinal cohort study’ or other studies performed ‘over time’ to show that TPB’s specific flavored products help adult users stop smoking more than tobacco-flavored products do. Yet FDA previously deemed these studies unnecessary.”

  • Australian Crackdown on Nicotine Imports Starts Today

    Australian Crackdown on Nicotine Imports Starts Today

    Beginning today, the importation of nicotine e-liquids will be closely monitored by the Australian Border Force. Currently Australians can import nicotine liquid for vaping from overseas or purchase it from a small number of participating pharmacies, provided they have a valid doctor’s prescription.

    Credit: Belyay

    Consumers who fail to include a nicotine prescription with their order will be subject to a fine of up to $222,000. The new system will work if enough doctors, pharmacists, smokers and vapers are willing to comply and are provided with sufficient information, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. The article reports that very few are interested in complying with the rules and most are poorly informed. Little effort has been made to disseminate information about the new arrangements.

    More than 2.5 million Australians still smoke. The National Drug Strategy Household Survey estimated that the number of Australians vaping was 240,000 in 2016 and 520,000 in 2019. If the number of Australians vaping is still increasing, as many as 600,000 may be vaping now, according to the article.

    At present, only a very small number of people vaping have a prescription as is required. Most nicotine supplies are imported without a prescription or purchased from the black market. If compliance with the new arrangements is poor, then some will return to smoking while others will purchase supplies from the black market. Neither are good outcomes.

  • U.S. House Committee Advances Legal Marijuana Bill

    U.S. House Committee Advances Legal Marijuana Bill

    The U.S. House Judiciary Committee approved a bill Thursday that would decriminalize and deschedule marijuana by a vote of 26-15. The move ended a two-day markup period in which the panel also approved a series of bipartisan measures designed to lower drug prices.

    Credit: EKKAPON

    The measure, sponsored by Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler, passed the chamber last year but stalled in the GOP-controlled Senate, according to rollcall.com. Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer proposed a similar measure in July, sparking hopes among advocates that the legislation would finally make it into law.

    The bill would decriminalize and deschedule cannabis, and implement a federal tax on marijuana products to fund grants for communities hardest hit by the nation’s war on drugs. The bill would also allow most individuals convicted of nonviolent cannabis offenses to expunge their records, with the exception of those considered to be “kingpins,” or those who helped oversee a criminal drug ring.

    The outlook for final passage is still uncertain. Schumer and co-sponsors, including Sen. Cory Booker, have not yet formally introduced their draft bill, and Congress is currently consumed by a debate to pass trillions of dollars in spending on infrastructure and social programs, including a first-ever e-cigarette tax.

  • Smoore, FEELM  Recommit to Innovation at UK Media Day

    Smoore, FEELM Recommit to Innovation at UK Media Day

    During its UK Media Day at Silverstone Circuit, held yesterday, Shenzhen Smoore Technology Co. announced that its flagship atomization brand, FEELM, is reinforcing its commitment to innovations in atomization technology. The company stated that its atomization coil is the key to the vape product performance and vaping experience.

    Credit: FEELM

    “Our Group has also made satisfying inroads in the research and development of medical and healthcare vaping products, with more than 1,000 scientists and experts from different backgrounds,” said Smoore’s Chief Scientist Dr. Shi Zhiqiang.

    FEELM coil technology features instant and highly efficient atomization, which produces a smooth and pure taste, authentic flavor and high nicotine delivery efficiency, according to FEELM. In 2019, FEELM launched its “FEELM Inside” global authentication trademark. The trademark serves as a symbol of an excellent vaping experience. Today, the “FEELM inside” symbol is on the closed system pods of many of the market-leading vapor brands around the world, such as RELX, NJOY, HAKA, HEXA, and VAPO.

    “With the global launch of FEELM in 2016, FEELM has a significant impact on the research and manufacturing of closed vaping products, changing the global vaping industry landscape. The ‘FEELM inside’ symbol today is widely recognized by our partners and consumers as a certification of our commitment to quality, authenticity and high-quality vaping experience,” said Zhiqiang Shi. “Our Group has also made satisfying inroads in the research and development of medical and healthcare vaping products, with more than 1,000 scientists and experts from different backgrounds.”

    FEELM alos announced it had opened the industry’s first fully automated closed-pod production line in 2019, realizing zero-staff inspection of product quality. To date, the productivity of a single line can produce 7,200 standard pods per hour, and the annual production capacity of FEELM now surpasses three billion pieces.

    As the world’s largest vaping device manufacturer in terms of revenue, Smoore has accounted for 18.9 percent of the total global market share in 2020, according to Frost & Sullivan.

  • NYTS: Youth E-Cig Use Down 40% From Pre-Covid Results

    NYTS: Youth E-Cig Use Down 40% From Pre-Covid Results

    Photo: flydragon

    A study released by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that youth use of e-cigarettes fell sharply in 2021, the second consecutive year of major declines, according to the government’s annual National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS). An estimated more than 2 million U.S. middle and high school students reported currently using e-cigarettes in 2021, with more than 8 in 10 of those youth using flavored e-cigarettes.

    The study shows that an estimated 11.3 percent (1.72 million) of high school students and an estimated 2.8 percent (320,000) of middle school students reported current e-cigarette use, lower than the 19.6 percent (high school) reported in 2020 and substantially lower than the 27.5 percent reported in 2019 (high school), according to previous FDA statements. Middle school vaping fell to 2.8 percent this year from 4.7 percent in 2020—a 40.4 percent decline. Middle school past 30-day vaping in 2020 fell 55.2 percent from 2019.

    The report, published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, was based on data from the 2021 NYTS, a cross-sectional, self-administered survey of U.S. middle (grades 6–8) and high (grades 9–12) school students. The study assessed current (used on one or more of the past 30 days) e-cigarette use; frequency of use; and use by device type, flavors and usual brand.

    Credit: CASAA

    Among youth who currently used e-cigarettes, the study found the most commonly used e-cigarette device type was disposables (53.7 percent), followed by prefilled or refillable pods or cartridges (28.7 percent), and tanks or mod systems (9.0 percent). Some in the industry have pointed out that “for the record, past-30-day ever use was 7.6%. The real numbers are: Disposables: 4.1%, Pods or cartridges: 2.2%, Tanks or mod systems: 0.7%,” a vaping advocate (@phil_w888) tweeted.

    The FDA and CDC are also being accused of using the data to further an anti-vaping agenda. The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association (CASAA) tweeted that “Past-month HS vaping declines dramatically–down 47% from 3.6 million to 1.72 million–with daily vaping down from 4.4% to around 3%. Yet the general public wouldn’t know that from the negative spin made by Public Health.”

    Administered Jan. 18- May 21, 2021, thus NYTS was the first to be fully conducted during the Covid-19 pandemic. Data were collected using an online survey to allow eligible students to participate in the classroom, at home or in some other place to account for various school settings during this time. Prior to the pandemic, the survey was conducted in person, inside the school classroom. Because of the changes in the way the survey was conducted this year, the FDA claims results of the 2021 NYTS cannot be compared to findings from previous surveys.

    Robin Koval, president and chief executive of Truth Initiative, a nonprofit anti-nicotine advocacy group, emphasized that the sharp drop in youth vaping may be attributable to pandemic restrictions that kept youth at home. “Kids were not in school, they were not seeing friends,” Koval said. There was no mention of the drop from 2019 numbers that were measured before the Covid-19 pandemic began.

    “These data highlight the fact that flavored e-cigarettes are still extremely popular with kids. And we are equally disturbed by the quarter of high school students who use e-cigarettes and say they vape every single day,” said Mitch Zeller, director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products. “The FDA continues to take action against those who sell or target e-cigarettes and e-liquids to kids, as seen just this year by the denial of more than one million premarket applications for flavored electronic nicotine delivery system products. It is critical that these products come off the market and out of the hands of our nation’s youth.”

  • ITC: IQOS Infringes on BAT Patents, U.S. Sales to End

    ITC: IQOS Infringes on BAT Patents, U.S. Sales to End

    Photo: theaphotography

    The International Trade Commission (ITC) has upheld an initial determination from May 2021 that Philip Morris International’s IQOS device infringes on two patents owned by BAT subsidiary Reynolds American Inc. (RAI).

    The agency has instituted an import ban and a cease-and-desist order preventing IQOS consumables and devices from being sold in the U.S. in 60 days. PMI’s U.S. partner, Altria Group, plans to continue to sell IQOS through the 60-day period in its existing markets.

    BAT welcomed the ruling. “Infringement of our intellectual property undermines our ability to invest and innovate and thereby reduce the health impact of our business,” the company wrote in a statement. “We will therefore defend our IP robustly across the globe.”

    The patents relate to an electronically powered device with a heater to generate an aerosol and expire in October 2026 and November 2031. BAT has filed similar cases globally, including in Germany, the U.K., Japan and Italy.

    Morgan Stanley said the ruling would have limited financial impact on PMI and Altria, as IQOS in the U.S. is not a meaningful contributor to the companies’ earnings. The outcome of similar cases brought by BAT against PMI internationally, however, could have a greater impact. But so far, PMI has been successful defending cases in the U.K. and Greece.

    The investment bank also noted that the IQOS ban applies to imported product, suggesting it may be overcome by shifting production to the U.S.

    The ITC decision will now be reviewed by the U.S. Trade Representative. If the decision is not vetoed within 60 days (only a handful have ever been vetoed), it can be appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals, but the import ban would still be in effect throughout an appeals process.

  • Long Awaited Juul2 Device Launches in U.K. Market

    Long Awaited Juul2 Device Launches in U.K. Market

    Photo: steheap

    Juul Labs has unveiled its JUUL2 device in the U.K.

    The device features a more consistent vapor experience, a longer battery life and anti-counterfeit technology.

    Launching initially on the Juul.co.uk website on Sept. 30, the JUUL2 system has been updated from previous versions with new technology and features based on feedback from smokers.

    Among other features, the JUUL2 features a more consistent vapor experience, a longer battery life and a smart light system communicating e-liquid level and battery life.

    The JUUL2 also comes with newly designed tobacco and menthol JUUL2 pods (18 mg/mL nicotine strength) and technology to prevent unauthorized use. The device will not work when it detects counterfeit pods.

    “We are pleased to launch the next-generation JUUL2 in the U.K.,” Juul Labs’ EMEA vice president, Dan Thomson, said in a statement. “A key part of our mission is to transition adult smokers away from cigarettes, the leading cause of preventable death in the world, killing some 90,000 Britons annually.

    “We believe the best method to switch adult smokers from combustible cigarettes to a potentially less harmful noncombustible alternative is to provide a product that closely resembles the consistency and experience of smoking. With JUUL2, we believe we are taking another step in that direction as we aim to transition even more adult smokers.”

    A retail roll-out is planned for early 2022, and all U.K. retailers stocking JUUL products will continue to uphold the company’s Challenge 25 age verification policy, which includes continued mystery shopping audits.

  • Juul Settlement to Fund Research Against Vaping

    Juul Settlement to Fund Research Against Vaping

    Photo: steheap

    North Carolina will use the $40 million settlement with Juul Labs, announced in June by Attorney General Josh Stein, to help fund research to stop the use of electronic cigarettes among young people, reports The Fayetteville Observer.

     “For years, Juul targeted young people, including teens, with its highly addictive e-cigarette,” said Stein. “It lit the spark and fanned the flames of a vaping epidemic among our children—one that you can see in any high school in North Carolina. This win will go a long way in keeping Juul products out of kids’ hands, keeping its chemical vapor out of their lungs and keeping its nicotine from poisoning and addicting their brains.”

     Juul Labs will pay North Carolina $13 million in the first year, $8 million the second year, $7.5 million the third year, $7 million the fourth year and $2.25 million the fifth and sixth years. The payout is set to fund programs conducting research and prevention of electronic cigarettes, according to Travis Greer, regional tobacco control manager for the Cumberland County Health Department.

  • FDA Urged to Deny Applications for All Flavored E-Cigarettes

    FDA Urged to Deny Applications for All Flavored E-Cigarettes

    Photo: Boki

    Seven leading public health, medical and parent organizations are urging the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to expedite decisions on remaining marketing applications for e-cigarettes and promptly deny applications for all flavored e-cigarettes, including menthol-flavored products.

    The organizations say they are concerned about these products’ appeal to youth and adverse impact on public health.

    In a letter to Acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock, the groups also urged the FDA to prioritize enforcement against unauthorized flavored e-cigarettes with the largest market shares and products with the highest prevalence of youth use.

    The groups sending the letter are the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, American Heart Association, American Lung Association, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, Parents Against Vaping e-cigarettes and Truth Initiative.

    Since Sept. 9, the FDA has denied marketing applications for more than 1,167,000 products, but it has yet to issue decisions on e-cigarette brands with the highest market shares, such as Juul, Vuse, NJOY and Blu, which make up over 78 percent of the market, according to Nielsen data.

    The health groups expressed particular concern that the FDA is still considering whether to authorize any menthol-flavored e-cigarettes and urged the FDA not to do so given the clear evidence that menthol is a flavor that appeals to and is widely used by kids.

    “Contrary to the FDA’s August 26 statement that menthol e-cigarette products raise ‘unique considerations’ for purposes of FDA review, we do not believe there is anything ‘unique’ about menthol flavoring that would justify issuance of a marketing order,” the groups wrote in their letter. “Indeed, there is no question that when FDA decided to prioritize enforcement against cartridge-based e-cigarettes in flavors other than menthol and tobacco, youth shifted to using menthol-flavored products.”

  • Poda Holdings Emerges After Recent Name Change

    Poda Holdings Emerges After Recent Name Change

    Photo: Poda Holdings

    Poda Holdings has completed the name change from Poda Lifestyle and Wellness to Poda Holdings, pursuant to a directors’ resolution announced earlier this month. The company’s shares will remain trading on the Canadian Securities Exchange under the ticker symbol PODA upon the opening of the markets on Sept. 27, 2021.

     The CUSIP number assigned to the company’s shares following the name change is 73044N10 4 (ISIN: CA73044N1042). No action is required by stockholders, and outstanding stock certificates are not affected by the name change and will not need to be exchanged.

    In related news, the company has engaged CFN Enterprises, owner and operator of CFN Media, to provide social media and client outreach strategy services for the company.