Amid growing public concern over the safety of additives in
products ranging from caffeinated energy drinks to industrial chemicals in food
containers and water bottles, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is under
pressure to reexamine its rules, and there are signs it may do so.
It has been more than half a century since U.S.
regulations governing food additives were last revised. In that time, the
number of chemicals in the food supply has risen from fewer than 2,000 to an
estimated 10,000, many of which are never reviewed by the FDA because companies
and their advisers have declared them to be safe.
Under loose regulations created more than 50 years ago to
help companies avoid lengthy delays in getting food additives approved, the FDA
created a list of products considered "generally recognized as safe"
(GRAS).
Companies can either petition to get their ingredients
affirmed safe by the FDA, or they can declare them safe based on their own
research or that of hired consultants. The FDA has the option to challenge such
declarations but has rarely done so.
"Our system really puts the onus on us to prove
harm," FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg said at the Reuters Health Summit in New York . "It's
perhaps a time to look at what the legal framework looks like and what
opportunities there are now to ask and answer questions in new ways because of
advances in science and technology."
"We are an agency with a wonderful history, but many of
our laws are rooted in a different historical era," Hamburg said. "An important question to
ask is, would this be a good time to look at this issue again?"
According to research by the Pew Charitable Trusts' food
additives project, which is conducting a three-year investigation into food
additive regulation, 1,000 chemicals have been self-affirmed by industry as
GRAS without notice to the FDA.
Another 2,000 chemicals have been declared GRAS by the
Flavor and Extracts Manufacturers Association, which submits information to the
FDA, though the FDA does not review it, according to Pew, bringing to about
3,000 the number of chemicals in the food supply never reviewed by the FDA.
Caffeine, when contained in cola-type drinks, was declared
decades ago to be a GRAS product in cola-type beverages. Yet the agency has not
challenged companies to prove the safety of caffeine in other products or other
beverages - including those whose levels exceed the 71 milligrams per 12 ounces
typically contained in soda.
One 8.4 fluid ounce can of Red Bull Energy Drink contains 80
milligrams of caffeine, according to its website. Twelve ounces of Red Bull
contain 114 milligrams of caffeine.
Last year Democratic Senators Dick Durbin of Illinois and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut called on the FDA to respond to
concerns about the effect on children of caffeine in energy drinks.
Between January 2004 and October 2012, the FDA identified 21
reports of heart rate abnormalities, vomiting, convulsions and other medical
problems, some life-threatening, in people who had drunk Red Bull. But Hamburg said the events
are not sufficient to warrant regulatory action "at the present
time."
"There is not a clear linkage of exposure to caffeine
and the adverse events reported," she said, adding that the agency will
continue to monitor energy drinks and that further examination of the
underlying science "may merit action going forward."
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