98-14915. Food Labeling; Statement of Identity, Nutrition Labeling and Ingredient Labeling of Dietary Supplements; Compliance Policy Guide, Revocation  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 108 (Friday, June 5, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 30615-30620]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-14915]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Food and Drug Administration
    
    21 CFR Part 101
    
    [Docket Nos. 95N-0245 and 94P-0110]
    RIN 0910-AA59
    
    
    Food Labeling; Statement of Identity, Nutrition Labeling and 
    Ingredient Labeling of Dietary Supplements; Compliance Policy Guide, 
    Revocation
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule; action on petitions for reconsideration.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is revising its 
    nutrition labeling requirements for dietary supplements that contain 
    liquid extracts to allow the quantity of an extract to be listed on the 
    basis of volume, solvents present to be listed in the ingredient 
    statement, and the optional listing in the nutrition label of the ratio 
    of starting material to the final volume of solvent, and to clarify 
    that the quantity of any constituents of dietary ingredients be listed 
    in the nutrition label in terms of quantitative amount by weight on a 
    ``per serving'' basis. FDA is also eliminating the requirement that a 
    description of a dried extract include the name of the solvent used. 
    This action is in response to four petitions for reconsideration.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: These revisions are effective March 23, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Susan Thompson, Center for Food Safety 
    and Applied Nutrition (HFS-165), Food and Drug Administration, 200 C 
    St. SW., Washington, DC 20204, 202-205-5587.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        In the Federal Register of September 23, 1997 (62 FR 49826), FDA 
    published a final rule entitled ``Food Labeling; Statement of Identity, 
    Nutrition and Ingredient Labeling of Dietary Supplements; Compliance 
    Policy Guide, Revocation'' (hereinafter identified as ``the September 
    1997 final rule''). In the September 1997 final rule, FDA amended its 
    food labeling regulations to establish requirements for the 
    identification of dietary supplements and for their nutrition labeling 
    and ingredient labeling in response to the Dietary Supplement Health 
    and Education Act of 1994 (the DSHEA). The September 1997 final rule is 
    to become effective March 23, 1999.
        The requirements for the nutrition labeling of dietary supplements 
    are found in Sec. 101.36 (21 CFR 101.36). Specifically, the 
    requirements for liquid and dried extracts are in section 
    Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) and (b)(3)(ii)(C), respectively. Section 
    101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) states:
        For any dietary ingredient that is a liquid extract from which 
    the solvent has not been removed, the quantity listed shall be the 
    weight of the total extract with information on the concentration of 
    the dietary ingredient, the solvent used, and the condition of the 
    starting material (i.e., whether it is fresh or dried), e.g., 
    ``fresh dandelion root extract, x mg (y:z) in 70% ethanol,'' where x 
    is the number of mg of the entire extract, y is the weight of the 
    starting material and z is the volume (milliliters) of solvent. 
    Where the solvent has been partially removed (not to dryness), the 
    final concentration shall be stated (e.g., if the original extract 
    was 1:5 and 50 percent of the solvent was removed, then the final 
    concentration shall be stated as 1:2.5).
        Section 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(C) states:
        For a dietary ingredient that is an extract from which the 
    solvent has been removed, the weight of the ingredient shall be the 
    weight of the dried extract. The dried extract shall be described by 
    an appropriately descriptive term that identifies the solvent used, 
    e.g., ``dried hexane extract of ----------'' or ``----------, dried 
    hexane extract.''
    
    II. Petitions for Reconsideration
    
        FDA received four petitions for reconsideration under Sec. 10.33 
    (21 CFR 10.33) relating to the requirements for the labeling of 
    extracts. A petition for reconsideration from the American Herbal 
    Products Association (AHPA), the Utah Natural Products Alliance, and 
    the National Nutritional Foods Association (Docket Nos. 95N-0245/PRC 4 
    and 94P-0110/PRC 4) (hereinafter referred to as the ``joint 
    petition''), requested that FDA reconsider the provision on liquid 
    extracts in Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B), stay its effective date, and 
    adopt the petition's proposed restatement of this provision. The 
    petitioners stated that, with respect to extracts, FDA had proposed 
    ``For any dietary ingredients that are liquid extracts, the weight 
    shall not include the weight of solvents'' (60 FR 67194 at 67216, 
    December 28, 1995). The petitioners stated that interested parties 
    could not reasonably have anticipated that the final rule would require 
    specifying the solvent used, the ratio, and the condition of the 
    starting material. Thus, they contended that the final rule violated 
    the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 
    553), because of inadequate provision of notice and opportunity for 
    comment.
        The petitioners recommended the adoption of the following technical 
    amendments to this provision: (1) The quantity of a dietary supplement 
    that is a liquid extract be stated in volume, not weight measurements; 
    (2) solvents that have not been removed from a liquid extract be 
    included in the ingredient list; (3) information on the concentration 
    of a liquid extract in the form y:z be optional; and (4) constituents 
    of a liquid extract be stated by weight on a ``per serving'' basis.
        Specifically, the petition requested that Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) 
    be amended to read:
        For any dietary ingredient that is a liquid extract from which 
    the solvent has not been removed, the quantity listed shall not be 
    the weight but shall instead be the volume of the total extract. If 
    information is included on the concentration of the dietary 
    ingredient in the form y:z, it shall be expressed as a ratio of the 
    weight (in grams) of the starting material to the volume (in 
    milliliters) of solvent. Additionally, the condition of the starting 
    material shall be stated if the starting material is in fresh 
    condition (e.g., ``fresh dandelion root extract (y:z)''), and may be 
    stated if the starting material is in dried condition. If a product 
    contains a dietary ingredient that is a liquid extract from which 
    the solvent has not been removed and is labeled in any manner which 
    quantifies or claims to contain one or more specific contained 
    constituents of a botanical, the constituent shall be quantified on 
    the label by weight on a ``per serving'' basis, in accordance with 
    paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section.
        The petitioners stated that with these technical amendments the 
    provision would be consistent with the original proposal. The 
    petitioners also stated that they are developing guidelines for 
    manufacturing extracts that they plan to publish in a volume 
    tentatively entitled ``AHPA Extracts Manufacturers Guidelines.''
        Another petition for reconsideration, from Wakunaga of America Co., 
    Ltd. (Docket Nos. 95N-0245/PRC 1 and 94P-0110/PRC 1) (hereinafter 
    referred to as the ``Wakunaga petition''), requested that FDA 
    reconsider and revoke the provisions on extracts or revise those 
    provisions to eliminate the requirement to identify the solvent used 
    and the ratio of the botanical to the solvent. The petitioner stated 
    that FDA apparently adopted a suggestion in a comment to describe 
    extracts by the ratio of weight to volume of solvent without any 
    opportunity for other parties to comment on this requirement in 
    violation of the Administrative Procedure Act. The petitioner contended 
    that the disclosure of proprietary information was never addressed by 
    FDA in the proposed or final regulations and that the potential
    
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    damages of such disclosure are sufficient grounds to revoke the 
    requirement for such disclosures. The petitioner emphasized that if FDA 
    did not accept either of their requests, it should at least propose the 
    requirements in the final rule to allow opportunity for comment.
        Two other petitions for reconsideration were received, one from 
    AHPA (Docket Nos. 95N-0245/PRC 2 and 94P-0110/PRC 2) (hereinafter 
    referred to the ``AHPA petition''), and another from the Council for 
    Responsible Nutrition and Nutrilite Division of Amway Corporation 
    (Docket Nos. 95N-0245/PRC 3 and 94P-0110/PRC 3) (hereinafter referred 
    to as the ``CRN/Amway petition''). Both petitioners requested that FDA 
    reconsider the provision on dried extracts in Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B), 
    stay the effective date of the second sentence of this provision, and 
    revoke the sentence. In addition, AHPA further requested that FDA 
    should confer with AHPA and other interested parties regarding the need 
    for, and alternatives to, the revoked requirement.
        AHPA included a number of reasons in the statement of grounds for 
    their petition. The petitioners stated that interested parties were 
    deprived of adequate notice and opportunity for comment on solvent 
    identification in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act's 
    rulemaking provisions. AHPA also contended that identifying solvents 
    used in the manufacture of dried extracts is arbitrary. The petitioners 
    stated that the solvent used in the preparation of an extract is only 
    one factor of many factors that are important in the manufacturing 
    process. Moreover, they stated that ``solvents used in food, food 
    additives, and substances generally recognized as safe are not required 
    to be disclosed on labels.''
        Furthermore, the petitioners argued that identifying solvents used 
    in the manufacture of dried extracts is potentially misleading. They 
    expressed concern that consumers may assume that solvents remain in the 
    products when, in fact, they do not. Also, they observed that such 
    disclosure may cause some manufacturers to switch to solvents that are 
    less effective because of the fear that consumers may be misled by 
    chemical solvent names.
        The CRN/Amway petition contained some of the same reasons as the 
    AHPA petition for revoking the second sentence of the provision on 
    dried extracts. The petitioners stated that interested parties were not 
    given notice and opportunity to comment on this sentence. They stated 
    that this provision should be made the subject of a new notice of 
    proposed rulemaking if FDA wishes to include it in the final 
    regulations.
        The CRN/Amway petition also took issue with FDA's statement in the 
    preamble of the September 1997 final rule (62 FR 49826 at 49834) that 
    ``solvent information is needed in the nutrition label of dietary 
    supplements to appropriately describe extracts because dietary 
    ingredients do not have individual regulations, like the regulations 
    for food additives, that specify how they are to be made, and, when 
    needed for identity or safety reasons, what solvent can be used in the 
    processing.'' The petitioners stated that the example that FDA used of 
    a food additive regulation that specifies what solvent can be used 
    (i.e., 21 CFR 172.580(b)) is atypical and, like AHPA, charged that 
    requiring solvent information in the nutrition label of dietary 
    supplements imposes labeling requirements that are inconsistent with 
    conventional foods.
        FDA received a comment in support of the AHPA, Wakunaga, and CRN/
    Amway petitions that stated that it agreed with these petitions.
        FDA also received a submission on December 24, 1997, identified by 
    the submitter as comments on the joint petition, a petition for 
    reconsideration, a petition for stay of action, and a petition to amend 
    parts of Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii). For the reasons discussed in the 
    following paragraphs, the agency has handled this submission only as a 
    comment on the joint petition. As a comment on the joint petition, it 
    stated general support for the proposed technical amendments to 
    Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) recommended by the joint petition and stated 
    the belief that these amendments could be made administratively, 
    without the need for notice and comment.
        Under Sec. 10.33, a petition for reconsideration is to be submitted 
    within 30 days from the date of the decision involved (this can be 
    waived for good cause) and shall contain no new information or views. 
    Because the December 24, 1997, submission was not timely and contains 
    new information and views, FDA has not filed it as a petition for 
    reconsideration.
        Likewise, FDA is not handling this submission as a petition for 
    stay of action because, under 21 CFR 10.35, this type of petition must 
    specify the provision for which a stay is requested and be submitted no 
    later that 30 days after the date of the decision involved. FDA finds 
    no mention of a stay in the submission.
        Further, the December 24, 1997, submission has not been filed as a 
    petition to amend parts of Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii). This submission 
    pointed out specific areas of confusion and expressed the hope that it 
    would stimulate discussion about how best to standardize labeling 
    practices. In addition, the submission suggested adding a new section 
    to define the terms ``extract,'' ``botanical extract,'' and ``native 
    extract.'' The submission also proposed a scheme that would allow for 
    the identification in the nutrition label of the type of solvent used, 
    rather than the specific name of the solvent. Additionally, the 
    submission stated that procedures should be established for expressing 
    the ratio of dried extracts that would clarify whether or not fillers 
    have been taken into consideration. These issues are beyond the scope 
    of reconsideration of the September 1997 final rule, and are therefore 
    not addressed in this final rule. The agency urges industry to consider 
    them in the development of guidelines on extracts, however.
    
    III. Response to Petitions
    
        FDA has fully evaluated the petitions for reconsideration and 
    reviewed the administrative record of the September 1997 final rule to 
    determine if, in light of the arguments raised in the petitions, the 
    agency would have reached a different decision regarding the nutrition 
    labeling of dry and liquid extracts in dietary supplements.
        As explained in the following paragraphs, the agency has determined 
    that, based on the administrative record at the time of the publication 
    of the September 1997 final rule, the agency did not make the correct 
    decision.
        The joint petition, AHPA petition, and CRN/Amway petition requested 
    that FDA stay the effective date of the provisions of the final 
    regulations pertaining to extracts. The agency is not issuing a stay 
    because the agency believes that a stay is unnecessary. This final rule 
    resolves the issues well enough in advance of March 23, 1999, the 
    effective date for this rule and the September 1997 final rule, to 
    allow firms to meet that effective date.
    
    A. Liquid Extracts
    
        In the agency's December 28, 1995 (60 FR 67194), proposed rule (the 
    December 1995 proposal) on nutrition labeling of dietary supplements 
    entitled ``Food Labeling; Statement of Identity, Nutrition Labeling and 
    Ingredient Labeling of Dietary Supplements,'' the agency proposed that 
    for dietary ingredients for which the Reference Daily Intakes (RDI's) 
    and the Daily
    
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    Reference Values (DRV's) have not been established, the supplement 
    facts should include the quantitative amount by weight per serving of 
    the dietary ingredient listed, and not the weight of any component, or 
    the source of, that dietary ingredient. For dietary ingredients that 
    are liquid extracts, the agency proposed that the weight would not 
    include the weight of the solvents.
        The comments on the December 1995 proposal convinced the agency 
    that this latter proposal with respect to liquid extracts was 
    unfeasible. The petitions for reconsideration do not question that 
    decision, and the agency stands by it. In the December 1995 proposal's 
    stead, the agency required that the quantity of the entire extract be 
    listed. The petitions for reconsideration have not questioned this 
    provision of the September 1997 final rule.
        They do, however, question several other aspects of the final 
    provision on liquid extracts, some of which follow directly from the 
    quantification of the entire extract and others that arise less 
    directly from that decision. The former include whether the volume or 
    the weight should be used to quantify a liquid extract and whether the 
    solvent in the extract should be listed in the nutrition information or 
    in the ingredient list. The latter include whether the ratio of the 
    starting material to the final product should be required. The agency 
    has, therefore, reexamined the administrative record of the September 
    1997 final rule, in light of the arguments in the petitions for 
    reconsideration, to determine how the agency should have finalized the 
    provision regarding how to quantify liquid extracts.
    1. Quantity Listed on the Basis of Volume
        The joint petition proposed that the quantity of dietary 
    ingredients in liquid extract form be listed by volume and not by 
    weight. None of the comments of the December 1995 proposal directly 
    requested that the quantity of a liquid extract be listed in terms of 
    its volume rather than its weight. A couple of comments, however, 
    clearly assumed that liquid extracts should be listed by volume and not 
    by weight. For example, one comment suggested that the relative 
    strength of an extract be expressed in a volume to weight ratio that 
    would reflect what volume of liquid extract was equivalent to what 
    weight of herb. For such a ratio to be useful, the quantity of liquid 
    extract would have to be listed by volume. A second comment, portrayed 
    in the September 1997 final rule as agreeing to the listing of the 
    weight of the entire extract (62 FR 49826 at 49833), actually provided 
    several examples using volumes of entire extracts. The agency therefore 
    concludes that the administrative record for the September 1997 final 
    rule supports the use of volume as a means of listing the quantity of a 
    liquid extract.
        The joint petition forcefully argues that only volume should be 
    used to list the quantity of a liquid extract. However, the agency 
    received one comment that recommended that liquid extracts should be 
    listed by weight. The agency concludes that it is appropriate for 
    manufacturers to have the option of listing quantity by weight. The 
    agency is, therefore, modifying Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) to require 
    that liquid extracts be quantified either by volume or by weight.
    2. Solvent Listed in the Ingredient Statement
        In the December 1995 proposal (60 FR 67194 at 67216), FDA proposed 
    that the dry weight of a liquid extract be declared in the nutrition 
    label (proposed Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)) and that the name of any solvent 
    used appear in the ingredient statement (proposed Sec. 101.4(g)) (60 FR 
    67194 at 67214). In the September 1997 final rule, FDA required that 
    the weight of the total extract be listed in the nutrition label, and 
    that the name of the solvent be included in the description of the 
    liquid extract in the nutrition information. The joint petition 
    requested that solvents that have not been removed from a liquid 
    extract be included in the ingredient list. The Wakunaga petition 
    requested that FDA revoke the provisions on extracts in 
    Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) and (b)(3)(ii)(C) or revise those provisions 
    to eliminate the requirement to identify the solvent used.
        FDA has reconsidered this issue. Under section 403(i) of the 
    Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act) (21 U.S.C. 343(i)), the 
    solvent present in liquid extracts must be identified. The comments on 
    the December 1995 proposal do not directly address the issue of where 
    the solvent should be listed, although it is raised by their suggestion 
    that the quantity of the total extract be listed. On the one hand, FDA 
    continues to believe, as in the September 1997 final rule, that it is 
    appropriate for the name of the solvent to appear in the nutrition 
    label as a part of the description of a liquid extract because the 
    solvent is present in the extract, the entire extract is listed as a 
    dietary ingredient, and the solvent is included in the quantity listed 
    for the extract. Labeling in this manner is truthful and nonmisleading. 
    Those wishing to label solvents in this manner should, therefore, have 
    this option.
        On the other hand, the agency is persuaded that it is reasonable to 
    allow manufacturers to list solvents either in the nutrition label or 
    the ingredient list. This approach is consistent with the December 1995 
    proposal. Moreover, allowing flexibility is consistent with section 
    403(q)(5)(F) of the act, which allows sources of dietary ingredients to 
    be listed in either the nutrition label or the ingredient list. 
    Therefore, FDA is revising Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) to allow the 
    identity of the solvent in liquid extracts to be listed in either the 
    nutrition label or the ingredient list. The agency points out that if 
    the name of the solvent is not included in the nutrition label, it must 
    be included in the ingredient list in accordance with Sec. 101.4(g), as 
    had been proposed in the December 1995 proposal.
    3. Ratio Information Optional
        The December 1995 proposal would have required, for dietary 
    ingredients that are liquid extracts, that the weight listed for the 
    dietary ingredient not include the weight of the solvent. The comments 
    pointed out that listing the weight of an extract was not an indication 
    of the concentration or strength of an extract. Some of the comments 
    suggested that a truthful and nonmisleading description of the content 
    of the extract, such as a weight to volume ratio, should be permitted. 
    One of these comments stated that nonstandardized extracts typically 
    are marketed on the basis of a dry botanical to solvent ratio. Other 
    comments suggested that the ratio approach may be useful, but pointed 
    out that the weight of the botanical at the beginning of the extraction 
    process is only one of several factors that affect the concentration of 
    the extract.
        As a result of these comments, the agency required in the September 
    1997 final rule that liquid extracts should be described by a ratio of 
    the weight of the starting material to the volume of the solvent or a 
    description of these values.
        The petitions for reconsideration have convinced the agency, 
    however, that it did not adequately consider the comments. In fact, 
    none of the comments requested that ratio information be required, only 
    that it be permitted. Considering this fact, the agency is convinced 
    that, at the time of the September 1997 final rule, it incorrectly 
    required that this information be included in the labeling of dietary 
    supplements. Therefore, FDA is removing the requirement in 
    Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) that ratio information be stated. However, in
    
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    recognition of the comment on the December 1995 proposal suggesting 
    that the use of ratio information may provide truthful and 
    nonmisleading information, the agency is not opposed to the optional 
    inclusion of ratio information. Section 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) is, 
    therefore, revised accordingly.
        In the September 1997 final rule, the agency required that, when 
    listing ratios, the condition of the starting material should be 
    specified, i.e., whether it is fresh or dried. The joint petition 
    stated that the condition should be required only when the starting 
    material is fresh. FDA notes that one of the comments stated that 
    typically the starting material is dried. Additionally, when dried 
    material is used, the amount declared would not include the weight of 
    any water, so consumers would not be misled. Thus, FDA concludes that 
    it unnecessarily required that the condition of dried material be 
    declared. Therefore, FDA is revising Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) to 
    require that the condition of the starting material be required only 
    when it is fresh and may be stated optionally when it is dried.
        Having reconsidered the issue of the use of ratios and how they 
    should be stated, when declared, the agency believes that other 
    approaches (such as individual product monographs, good manufacturing 
    practices, or industry guidelines) may provide for better product 
    standardization in the future. These other approaches necessitate 
    further investigation and cooperative research between the agency and 
    the dietary supplement industry. Until such activities can be 
    accomplished, FDA believes that the most appropriate course of action, 
    and the one most useful to consumers, is to proceed to implement the 
    DSHEA by moving ahead with mandatory nutrition labeling in the most 
    truthful, nonmisleading, and flexible manner understood at this time. 
    As experience in this area is gained by all parties, FDA anticipates 
    that the flexibility in this final rule may minimize the need for 
    amendments.
    4. Quantification of Constituents of a Liquid Extract Should Be Listed 
    on a ``Per Serving'' Basis.
        The agency's December 1995 proposal requested comments on whether 
    constituents of dietary ingredients should be permitted to be listed. 
    The comments favored such listing. The September 1997 final rule, 
    therefore, provided that constituents of a dietary ingredient described 
    in Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(i), which would include constituents of extracts, 
    may be listed, followed by their quantitative amounts by weight.
        The joint petition requested clarification that constituents of 
    liquid extracts, when declared, should be listed on a ``per serving'' 
    basis. This petition requested that Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) pertaining 
    to liquid extracts be amended to include the sentence:
        If a product contains a dietary ingredient that is a liquid 
    extract from which the solvent has not been removed and is labeled 
    in any manner which quantifies or claims to contain one or more 
    specific contained constituents of a botanical, the constituent 
    shall be quantified on the label by weight on a `per serving' basis, 
    in accordance with paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section.
        The agency points out that the DSHEA specified that quantities in 
    the nutrition label should be listed on a ``per serving'' basis (see 
    section 403(q)(5)(F)(ii) of the act) and FDA implemented this basis for 
    the listing of dietary ingredients in Sec. 101.36. The agency 
    inadvertently did not repeat in Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(iii) that when the 
    quantitative amounts by weight of constituents are listed, they should 
    be reported on a ``per serving'' basis. The agency believes that 
    revising Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(iii) to add the words ``per serving'' is the 
    most direct way of clarifying this issue and points out that this 
    paragraph applies to constituents of all dietary ingredients described 
    in Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(i), not just to constituents of liquid 
    ingredients. Therefore, rather than revising Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B) 
    as requested, the agency is modifying Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(iii) to require 
    that the quantitative amount of constituents be declared on a ``per 
    serving'' basis.
    
    B. Dry Extracts
    
        As requested in the AHPA, CRN/Amway, and Wakunaga petitions, FDA 
    has reconsidered the provision on dried extracts in 
    Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(C). The AHPA petition requested that this 
    provision be reconsidered, revoked, or revised to eliminate the 
    requirement for identification of the solvent. The other petitions 
    requested that FDA reconsider and stay the second sentence of this 
    provision, then revoke it. The second sentence reads ``The dried 
    extract shall be described by an appropriately descriptive term that 
    identifies the solvent used, e.g., `dried hexane extract of ----------' 
    or `----------, dried hexane extract.' ''
        The September 1997 final rule required that the solvent used to 
    produce a dried extract be identified because the agency had concluded 
    that the solvent used determines the composition of an extract (62 FR 
    49834). Reconsidering the comments to the December 1995 proposal (which 
    were generally about liquid extracts but which the agency believes 
    apply to dry extracts also), the agency concludes that, although the 
    identity of the solvent contributes significantly to the composition of 
    an extract, other factors also contribute to the composition of an 
    extract. Because these other factors are not currently accounted for in 
    an adequate way by any labeling or other requirements, the agency 
    believes that, at the time of the September 1997 final rule, it was 
    inappropriate to require the identification of the solvent used to 
    produce a dry extract. Therefore, having reconsidered the 
    administrative record of the September 1997 final rule in light of the 
    arguments raised in the petitions for reconsideration, FDA is removing 
    the second sentence in Sec. 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(C) as requested by the 
    petitions.
        The agency believes that, given adequate compendial standards or 
    good manufacturing practices, the factors relevant to the concentration 
    and composition of dietary ingredients that are extracts may be 
    accounted for so as to enable the agency, at some future date, to 
    require further information about extracts in the labeling of dietary 
    supplements.
    
    IV. Economic Analysis
    
    A. Benefit/Cost Analysis
    
        FDA has examined the impacts of this final rule under Executive 
    Order 12866. Executive Order 12866 directs agencies to assess the costs 
    and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when regulation 
    is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net 
    benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public health 
    and safety effects; distributive impacts; and equity). According to 
    Executive Order 12866, a regulatory action is ``economically 
    significant'' if it meets any one of a number of specified conditions, 
    including having an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or 
    adversely affecting in a material way a sector of the economy, 
    competition, or jobs. A regulation is considered ``significant'' under 
    Executive Order 12866 if it raises novel legal or policy issues. FDA 
    finds that this final rule is neither an economically significant nor a 
    significant regulatory action as defined by Executive Order 12866.
        In addition, FDA has determined that this rule does not constitute 
    a significant rule under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 
    (UMRA) requiring cost-benefit and other analyses. A significant rule is 
    defined in section 1531(a) of UMRA as ``a Federal mandate that may 
    result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal
    
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    governments in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100,000,000 
    (adjusted annually for inflation) in any 1 year.''
        Finally, in accordance with the Small Business Regulatory 
    Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, the administrator of the Office of 
    Information and Regulatory Affairs of the Office of Management and 
    Budget has determined that this final rule is not a major rule for the 
    purpose of congressional review.
        FDA is publishing these revisions in response to four petitions for 
    reconsideration of the requirements for the labeling of extracts, which 
    are effective March 23, 1999. FDA is making compliance easier by making 
    the requirements for the labeling of extracts more flexible. These 
    revisions will not result in any additional costs.
    
    B. Small Entity Analysis
    
        FDA has examined the impacts of this final rule as required by the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612). If a rule has a 
    significant impact on a substantial number of small entities, the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to analyze options that 
    would minimize the economic impact of that rule on small entities. 
    Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605(b)), the agency 
    certifies that this final rule will not have a significant impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities.
        These revisions will provide additional flexibility for complying 
    with the requirements for the labeling of extracts. This rule will not 
    cause any additional labels to be changed but will make it easier for 
    small firms to comply with existing requirements by making those 
    requirements more flexible. FDA further notes that small products from 
    certain small firms are exempt from the requirements provided no claims 
    are made.
    
    V. Environmental Impact
    
        The agency has determined under 21 CFR 25.30(k) that this action is 
    of a type that does not individually or cumulatively have a significant 
    effect on the human environment. Therefore, neither an environmental 
    assessment nor an environmental impact statement is required.
    
    VI. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        This final rule contains information collection provisions that are 
    subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under 
    the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (the PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520). 
    The title, description, and respondent description of the information 
    collection provisions are shown below with an estimate of the annual 
    reporting burden. Included in the estimate is the time required for 
    reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and 
    maintaining any data needed, and completing and reviewing each 
    collection of information.
        Title: Requirements for Statement of Identity, Nutrition, and 
    Ingredient Labeling of Dietary Supplements.
        Description: This final rule revises the requirements for the 
    declaration of information concerning extracts used in dietary 
    supplements that were established by the September 1997 final rule. In 
    response to four petitions for reconsideration of the September 1997 
    final rule, FDA is revising the regulations that establish labeling 
    requirements for dietary supplements that contain extracts. This final 
    rule revises the labeling requirements for dietary supplements that 
    contain liquid extracts to allow: (1) The quantity of an extract to be 
    listed on the basis of volume or weight, (2) solvents present to be 
    listed in the ingredient statement or the nutrition label, and (3) the 
    optional listing in the nutrition label of the ratio of starting 
    material to the volume of solvent. FDA is also eliminating the 
    requirement that a description of a dried extract include the name of 
    the solvent used. This final rule does not revise any of the other 
    information collection provisions in the September 1997 final rule, 
    such as the requirements for nutrition labeling of dietary supplements.
        As required by section 3506(c)(2)(B) of the PRA (44 U.S.C. 
    3506(c)(2)(B)), FDA provided an opportunity for public comment under 
    the PRA when the proposed rule was published in December 1995. The 
    information collection provisions of the September 1997 final rule were 
    discussed in that final rule and submitted to OMB for its review and 
    approval (62 FR 49826 at 49845). OMB subsequently approved the 
    information collection provisions of the September 1997 final rule 
    under OMB control number 0910-0351 (see 62 FR 66635, December 19, 
    1997).
        The revisions in this final rule will reduce the information 
    collection burden to producers of dietary supplements that contain 
    extracts. FDA had previously estimated, and OMB had approved, the total 
    annual hour burden for the information collection requirements of the 
    September 1997 final rule at 136,040 hours. FDA now estimates that the 
    total annual hour burden for the information collection requirements of 
    the September 1997 final rule, as revised by this final rule, will be 
    134,890 hours.
        Description of Respondents: Persons and businesses, including small 
    businesses.
    
                                       Table 1.--Estimated Annual Reporting Burden                                  
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                      No. of                                                        Total Operating 
       21 CFR         No. of       Responses per   Total Annual      Hours per     Total Annual     and Maintenance 
       Section      Respondents     Respondent       Responses       Response          Hours             Costs      
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    101.36(b)(2)                                                                                                    
     and (b)(3)                                                                                                     
     (except                                                                                                        
     paragraphs                                                                                                     
     (b)(3)(ii)(                                                                                                    
     B) and                                                                                                         
     (b)(3)(ii)(                                                                                                    
     C))                                                                                                            
     (disclosure                                                                                                    
     )                850              40          34,000               3.9       132,600         $40,000,000       
    101.36(b)(3)                                                                                                    
     (ii)(B) and                                                                                                    
     (b)(3)(ii)(                                                                                                    
     C)                                                                                                             
     (disclosure                                                                                                    
     )                250              30           7,500               0.3         2,250                           
    101.36(f)(2)                                                                                                    
     (reporting)       20               1              20               2              40                           
    Totals                                                                        134,890         $40,000,000       
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        FDA estimated in the September 1997 final rule that there were a 
    maximum of 850 suppliers of dietary supplements and that each supplier 
    had 40 products whose labels required revision. FDA also estimated that 
    there were at least 250 of these firms that produce herbal or botanical 
    products. These are the firms whose products are most likely to contain 
    extracts as ingredients. Based on the agency's knowledge of the dietary 
    supplement marketplace, FDA estimates that approximately 25 percent of 
    these firms' products contain dry extracts. FDA estimates that with 
    elimination of
    
    [[Page 30620]]
    
    the requirement for identifying the solvent used for dry extracts, no 
    firms will provide information concerning the identity of the solvent. 
    FDA estimates that firms will provide the ratio of the starting 
    materials to the volume of the solvents used in the production of 
    liquid extracts only when it is in their best interest and that this 
    will occur no more than 10 percent of the time. The other revisions to 
    the regulations should also help reduce the amount of time that a firm 
    must spend to provide the required information. All of the information 
    required by this final rule to be disclosed on the label of dietary 
    supplements that contain liquid extracts is information that a firm 
    would be expected to have in the normal course of its business of 
    producing dietary supplements. Firms should know or have readily 
    available to them information on the amount of the extract by volume or 
    weight that is present in the dietary supplement and the identity of 
    the solvent. The hour burden estimates in Table 1 of this document are 
    for the information collection provisions established by regulation and 
    do not include those that stem solely from the act or the DSHEA.
        Although the statement of identity, nutrition, and ingredient 
    labeling regulations for dietary supplements in Sec. 101.36 were 
    approved following publication of the September 1997 final rule (OMB 
    control number 0910-0351), FDA has resubmitted them to OMB for approval 
    of the revised requirements for label disclosure of extract ingredients 
    in this final rule. Prior to the effective date of the regulations, FDA 
    will publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing OMB's decision 
    to approve, modify, or disapprove the revised requirements. An agency 
    may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, 
    a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
    control number.
    
    List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 101
    
        Food labeling, Nutrition, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
        Therefore, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under 
    authority delegated to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, 21 CFR part 
    101 is amended as follows:
    
    PART 101--FOOD LABELING
    
        1. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 101 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1453, 1454, 1455; 21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 342, 
    343, 348, 371.
    
        2. Section 101.36 is amended by revising paragraphs (b)(3)(ii)(B), 
    (b)(3)(ii)(C), and (b)(3)(iii) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 101.36  Nutrition labeling of dietary supplements.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (ii) * * *
        (B) For any dietary ingredient that is a liquid extract from which 
    the solvent has not been removed, the quantity listed shall be the 
    volume or weight of the total extract. Information on the condition of 
    the starting material shall be indicated when it is fresh and may be 
    indicated when it is dried. Information may be included on the 
    concentration of the dietary ingredient and the solvent used, e.g., 
    ``fresh dandelion root extract, x (y:z) in 70% ethanol,'' where x is 
    the number of milliliters (mL) or mg of the entire extract, y is the 
    weight of the starting material and z is the volume (mL) of solvent. 
    Where the solvent has been partially removed (not to dryness), the 
    final concentration, when indicated, shall be stated (e.g., if the 
    original extract was 1:5 and 50 percent of the solvent was removed, 
    then the final concentration shall be stated as 1:2.5). Where the name 
    of the solvent used is not included in the nutrition label, it is 
    required to be listed in the ingredient statement in accordance with 
    Sec. 101.4(g).
        (C) For a dietary ingredient that is an extract from which the 
    solvent has been removed, the weight of the ingredient shall be the 
    weight of the dried extract.
        (iii) The constituents of a dietary ingredient described in 
    paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section may be listed indented under the 
    dietary ingredient and followed by their quantitative amounts by weight 
    per serving, except that dietary ingredients described in paragraph 
    (b)(2) of this section shall be listed in accordance with that section. 
    When the constituents of a dietary ingredient described in paragraph 
    (b)(3)(i) of this section are listed, all other dietary ingredients 
    shall be declared in a column; however, the constituents themselves may 
    be declared in a column or in a linear display.
    * * * * *
    
        Dated: May 29, 1998.
    William B. Schultz,
    Deputy Commissioner for Policy.
    [FR Doc. 98-14915 Filed 6-4-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-01-F
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/23/1999
Published:
06/05/1998
Department:
Food and Drug Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule; action on petitions for reconsideration.
Document Number:
98-14915
Dates:
These revisions are effective March 23, 1999.
Pages:
30615-30620 (6 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket Nos. 95N-0245 and 94P-0110
RINs:
0910-AA59: Dietary Supplement Regulations in Response to DSHEA
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0910-AA59/dietary-supplement-regulations-in-response-to-dshea
PDF File:
98-14915.pdf
CFR: (4)
21 CFR 101.4(g)
21 CFR 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(B)
21 CFR 101.36(b)(3)(ii)(C)
21 CFR 101.36