1 / 51

Food and Drug Law September 27-28, 2010

Food and Drug Law September 27-28, 2010. Ralph F. Hall. Overview. Current events Combination products Food Protected interests Key concepts Food standards Adulteration Misbranding. Food. The Original Regulatory Challenge. Do you want to eat?. Mold Fungus

ryann
Télécharger la présentation

Food and Drug Law September 27-28, 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Food and Drug LawSeptember 27-28, 2010 Ralph F. Hall

  2. Overview • Current events • Combination products • Food • Protected interests • Key concepts • Food standards • Adulteration • Misbranding

  3. Food The Original Regulatory Challenge

  4. Do you want to eat? • Mold • Fungus • Partially decomposed food and • Microbial waste products

  5. Protected Interests? • Food safety • Actual • Botulism • Perceived • Delaney Clause • Personal decisions • BST, etc. • Sensibility • The “ukk” factor • Cultural differences • Knowledge • Personal choice • Vegetarians • Personal health/medical issues • Sodium, allergens,

  6. Protected Interests? • Economic interests • Quality • Non-safety related • Choice and economic protection • Contents • Quantity • Consumer protection • Producers • Oleomargarine • BST • Other?

  7. Food Regulatory Overview • Jurisdiction • Adulteration control • Food pureness • Absence of contamination • Manufacturing and handling controls • Misbranding • Accuracy of labels • Mandatory label content • Economic fraud • Food standards • Import controls • Recall authority

  8. Other Regulatory Systems • Raw agricultural products • Meat – USDA • Game meat - FDA • Poultry • USDA • Eggs – USDA • Alcohol – Treasury • Alcohol as an ingredient/component – FDA • 2% Rule • Restaurant food – local health officials

  9. Food Categories • “Food” • Common food • Standards, tolerances, etc. • Food Additives • Dietary supplements • Infant formula • Medicinal food • Special dietary uses • Color Additives • Food and non-food uses

  10. Possible Regulatory Approaches • Preset conditions or standards • Actual condition of article • Product • Labeling • Potential condition of the article • Consumer expectations • Effect or impact • Health & welfare • Economic

  11. Three Key Systems • § 341 – Ability to establish standards • Identity • Quality • Specific inclusions and exclusions • No standards for fresh or dried fruits • Except for avocadoes, citrus fruits and melon • § 342 –Adulteration • § 343 - Misbranding

  12. Three Regulatory ApproachesFood Standards • Preset conditions (i.e. food standards) • Definitions of food • What is “chicken noodle soup” • Purity • Pros • Certainty • Awareness • Cons • Static • Gaps • Time and cost to develop

  13. Food StandardsThe Pineapple Story • 21 CFR §145 • Types of canned pineapple • Rings, chunks, spears, crushed • Types of medium • Water, light syrup, heavy syrup • Definitional specificity

  14. Twin Concepts • Adulteration • Safety • Purity • Actual • Perceived • Economic expectations • Misbranding • Expectations • Anti-fraud • Evolved into safety (allergens, nutrition, etc) • Linkage to standards

  15. Adulteration(§342) • Initially designed to address food safety • Not limited to safety • Adulteration = change from expected • Intentionally added materials • Accidentally added materials • Removed materials • Intent not required • Protects against potential, not just actual condition

  16. Types of Adulteration • Unfit food • Poisonous • Filthy • Production processes or sources • Can cause undetected issues • Consumer expectations • Economic adulteration • “valuable constituent” removal • Substitution • Identify or constituents

  17. Adulteration§342 (a)-(h) • a) 1 • Contains poisonous substance • May render injurious • If not added, then must “ordinarily render it injurious to health” • Why the difference? • a) 2 • Contains any added poisonous or deleterious substance

  18. Adulteration§342 (a)-(h) • a) 3 • Consists of filthy, putrid or decomposed substance • Otherwise unfit for food • Role of personal sensibilities • a) 4 • Insanitary conditions • Origins of GMPs and HACCP • A) 5 – No road kill • a) 6 • Container is composed of poisonous substance • Impact on actual food? • Jurisdiction?

  19. Adulteration§342 (b) • b) • Omitted constituents • Substituted constituents • Concealment • Added bulk or weight • Make it appear better than it is • Who is the audience? • Reasonable consumer • “Credulous” consumer • FDA • Objective or subjective

  20. Sources of Adulteration • Insanitary manufacturing • Actual contamination • Bacterial • Foreign matter • Failure to follow GMPs • Violation even if no actual harm • Designed to be preventive measures • If GMPs followed, then reduced risk of contamination • GMPs define manufacturing, processing and distribution methods and requirements • Can be very detailed • Risk mitigation • HACCP is special type of GMP

  21. Other Types of Adulteration • Adulteration protects more than public health • Economic adulteration • Removal of “valuable” constituents • Failure to added listed ingredients • Quality substitution • “Corrective” actions or refurbishing • Mixing out of specification with in specification material to achieve compliance • If compliant, why do we care? • “Insanitary” but “fit for food” • Sanitary but “not fit for food”

  22. Adulteration • U.S. v Cases of Center Cut Asparagus • Center cut is less desirable • Can be tough and “woody” • FDA condemned product as being unwholesome/unfit for food • Inspectors tried to eat a large can and found it tough and inedible • District Court reversed • Society needs less expensive foods • Not everyone can afford only asparagus tips

  23. Economic AdulterationBireley’s Orange Beverage • Adulteration based on food type and label • Variation on misbranding? • Product not harmful • FDCA liberally construed • Congress used “brief test”, non-technical language” • Making food “appear better than it is” • Standard is the “reasonable person” • Compare to Sudden Change • Consider labeling, price, etc. to assess adulteration

  24. Economic AdulterationBireley’s Orange Beverage • Low value foods not adulterated • If accurately described • Consumer expectations • What knowledge to impart to manufacturer • Any statutory basis for considering manufacturer knowledge? • Would a consumer confuse this with orange juice? • Active concealment of inferiority • Pop’nOil • Labeling may not be a defense • Doesn’t every manufacturer try to “improve” their product?

  25. U.S. v. Tuente888 F. Supp. 1416 • Excessive drug residues in live hogs • Defendant was livestock dealer • Residues from producers, not Tuente • Prior issues and warnings • Are live hogs “food”? • Part of food chain • Deference to FDA • Introduction into interstate commerce • Producers first “introduced” hogs • Entire chain of distribution “introduces”

  26. AdulterationDietary Supplements • Adulteration if • Intended uses present significant or unreasonable risk • Imminent hazard • New dietary ingredient for which there is inadequate information • Must satisfy current GMPs

  27. Adulteration • § 342(a)(3) – food is adulterated “if it consists, in whole or in part, of any filthy, putrid or decomposed substance” • Is there a ‘de minimis” level for contamination • “We (FDA”) recognize that certain low levels of natural and unavoidable defects such as field insects may be present in certain foods even if handled in a sanitary manner.” FDA statement 1988 • Use of “tolerance levels”, Defect action levels and standards

  28. Food Purity • How pure is pure? • Standards • Levels of acceptable “contamination” • Tolerance levels • Defect action levels • Adulteration • Added components • Subtracted components • GMPs • Must be “wholesome”

  29. Defect Action Levels • Curry Powder • Less than 100 insect fragments per 25 grams • Hops • Less than 2500 aphids per 10 grams • Coffee • Less than 10% moldy beans

  30. Tolerance levels • “Even with modern technology, all defects in goods cannot be eliminated. …The defect levels (i.e. “tolerance levels”) set by … FDA represent a level below which the defect is both unavoidable under current technology and presents no health hazard” • 37 FR 6497 (3/30/72) • Do tolerance levels provide a defense if: • Insanitary conditions exist • Material deliberately added

  31. Tolerance levelsU.S. v. 484 Bags of Green Coffee • Coffee damaged in hurricane • Initially condemned • Product refurbished • Company claimed not adulterated • Met NY Coffee Exchange standards • “level of contamination which would, with reasonable certainty, render the article unfit for food” • Export use only • Adulteration has two, independent, basis • “consists, in whole or in part, of any filthy, putrid or decomposed substance” • “otherwise unfit for food”

  32. Tolerance levelsU.S. v. 484 Bags Green Coffee • Food can be condemned even if not “unfit for food” • Is the legal analysis correct? • Is this good policy? • Food can be “unfit for food” even if not filthy, putrid, etc. • Court can impose a stricter limit on food purity than FDA’s tolerance levels • Is there a “rule of reason” • Technical reading of statute

  33. Tolerance levelsU.S. v. Capital City Foods • Imported butter • Contained some “foreign matter” • 3 “minuscule” particles per pound • No butter tolerance levels then existed • If no tolerance standard is the standard then zero foreign matter? • “Few foods contain no natural or unavoidable defects.” • Contamination of this level “trifle” and not a “matter of concern” to the law

  34. Blend to Comply • Sugerman v. Forbragd • Can’t blend to satisfy defect action levels • Statutory support? • Why not (if the final product is safe and meets all requirements)? • Policy considerations

  35. Anderson Seafood447 F. Supp 1151 • Mercury in fish • Some natural, some from pollution • Multiple sources of mercury • Is this an “added” substance • Note lower standard • FDA • Not inherent in food • Would include “natural” contaminants” • Policy arguments in favor • Industry • Added by act of man

  36. Anderson Seafood447 F. Supp 1151 • Artificially introduced or attributable to the acts of man • “may render” injurious • Reasonable possibility, not certainty • Source of compound makes a difference • Natural v. introduced mercury • Policy reasons • Anti-backsliding provision • Highest standard denominator • Lack of precise knowledge • Scientific debate over numbers (MCEL) • 1.0 ppm level for adulteration

  37. U.S. v. 1200 Cans … Pasteurized Whole Eggs • How scientific must the evidence of contamination, filth, decomposition, etc. be? • §342(a)(4) • Food prepared, packed, etc. under insanitary conditions in adulterated even if no evidence of decomposition, filth, etc. • GMP violations as per se adulteration • Role of “reasonably possible” contamination

  38. Misbranding (§343) • Statutory purpose • Financial elements • Economic protection • Anti fraud provision • Marketplace effects • Safety • Not original goal • Allergens • Dietary content • Sodium • Fat content

  39. Misbranding • Accuracy • Identity • Content • Quality • Quantity • “False or misleading in any particular” • Information • Label content • Labeling?

  40. Misbranding§343 • a) - False or misleading in any particular • b) - Use of wrong name • c) – improperly labeled imitation food • d) – misleading fill • e) – label content • f) – failure to include required labeling • g, h) – Failure to satisfy food standard

  41. Misbranding • Statutory purpose • Financial elements • Economic protection • Anti fraud provision • Marketplace effects • Safety • Not original goal • Allergens • Dietary content • Sodium • Fat content

  42. Labeling Requirements(Misbranding) • §343 • Prohibits “false or misleading statements • No materiality requirement • 95 Barrels of … Apple Cider Vinegar • May mislead or deceive • “Expressed apple juice v. rehydrated juice • No substantive difference • May be factually true but misleading • “made from selected apples”

  43. 432 Cartons … Candy Lollipops • Product labeled as candy • Accurate ingredients • Called “liquor sticks” • Labeled Scotch, bourbon & gin • No actual liquor • False “in any particular” • Stricter than FTC “materiality” • False or misleading • True statement doesn’t cure a “false” one • Were these statements “false”? • Consumer protection

  44. U.S. v. Manischewitz Diet Thins • Same calories per gram as regular crackers • Smaller cracker • One misrepresentation enough • Label was technically accurate • “Pathetically eager” consumers • How is protected? • Average consumer or lowest common denominator?

  45. 21 CFR 101.4 • Dried egg whites, frozen egg whites and liquid egg whites may be declared as “egg whites” • Why do these provisions exist • Impact of 95 Barrels • Certainty and accuracy • Consumer communication?

  46. Eggs and Salmonella • Recent controversy • Assume interstate commerce and FDA jurisdiction • Do these eggs violate any FDA requirements? • Is so, which ones?

  47. The Challenge of “Organic”7 CFR Part 205 • Part of labeling and covered by §343 • Multiple interests • 4 categories • 100% organic • Organic (95-99%) organic • Made with organic ingredients (70-95%) • Organic component • Complex production, processing and shipping requirements • Third party acceditation

  48. Other Challenges • “Natural” • “Fresh” • “Pure” • “Home made” • “Original” • “Traditional” • “Imitation” (see 66 Cases of Jam v. U.S.) • Line between a claim and puffery?

  49. Labeling Requirements • Statutory obligations • Name • Manufacturer identity • Ingredients • Quantity • Nutritional information • Regulatory obligations • Detailed labeling regs exist • Food type specific in many cases

  50. Required Display Panels • Principal display panel • Mandatory content • Name, manufacturer, etc. • Size, shape, location, font, etc. requirements • Information panel • Similar format requirements • Nutritional labeling • Role of NLSA

More Related