94-21278. Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed; Specified Offal From Adult Sheep and Goats Prohibited in Ruminant Feed; Scrapie  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 166 (Monday, August 29, 1994)]
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    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-21278]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: August 29, 1994]
    
    
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    Part IX
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Health and Human Services
    
    
    
    
    
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    Food and Drug Administration
    
    
    
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    21 CFR Part 589
    
    
    
    Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed; Proposed Rule
    
    Bovine-Derived Materials; Agenda Letters to Manufacturers of FDA-
    Regulated Products; Notice
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Food and Drug Administration
    
    21 CFR Part 589
    
    [Docket No. 93N-0467]
    
     
    
    Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed; Specified 
    Offal From Adult Sheep and Goats Prohibited in Ruminant Feed; Scrapie
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposes to declare 
    that specified offal from adult (more than 12 months of age) sheep and 
    goats is not generally recognized as safe (GRAS) for use in ruminant 
    feed and is an unapproved food additive when added to ruminant feed. 
    Accordingly, in the absence of an approved food additive regulation or 
    investigational exemption, the use in ruminant feed of ingredients 
    containing specified offal from adult sheep or goats will cause the 
    feeds to be considered adulterated within the meaning of the Federal 
    Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act). FDA is proposing this action 
    because the specified offal may contain the agent that causes scrapie, 
    a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) of sheep and goats. In 
    the United Kingdom scrapie has been epidemiologically associated with 
    the occurrence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), another TSE. 
    Because FDA cannot positively rule out a direct association between 
    scrapie, BSE and human TSE's, FDA is proposing this action to protect 
    the health of animals and humans.
    
    DATES: Written comments by November 14, 1994. FDA is proposing that any 
    final rule that may issue based upon this proposal become effective 30 
    days after its publication in the Federal Register).
    
    ADDRESSES: Submit written comments to the Dockets Management Branch 
    (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, rm. 1-23, 12420 Parklawn Dr., 
    Rockville, MD 20857.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John P. Honstead, Center For 
    Veterinary Medicine (HFV-222), Food and Drug Administration, 7500 
    Standish Pl., Rockville, MD 20855, 301-594-1728.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        Processed tissues from sheep and goats are used as ingredients in 
    animal feeds. These products are derived from slaughter byproducts 
    (slaughter inedibles) and dead, dying, diseased, and disabled (4-D) 
    animals. The slaughter inedibles include certain offal (brain, spinal 
    cord, spleen, thymus, tonsil, lymph nodes, or intestines) that is 
    subject of this proposed rule. Four-D animals also contain these 
    designated materials. Such materials are designated ``specified 
    offals'' in this proposed rule.
        The Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO) has 
    recognized and defined several animal products as feed ingredients in 
    its official publication (Ref. 1). Products which are likely to contain 
    specified offal include, dried meat solubles, glandular meal, meat 
    meal, meat and bone meal, animal byproduct meal, meat meal tankage, 
    animal digest, bone ash, bone charcoal, spent bone charcoal, cooked 
    bone meal, and bone phosphate.
    
    A. Processing Animal Tissues for Feed Ingredients
    
        Generally, feed ingredients from slaughter byproducts and 4-D 
    animals are processed by rendering. Rendering involves cooking the 
    slaughter byproducts or the whole carcasses of 4-D animals at 240 to 
    290  deg.F for 20 minutes to 3 hours to separate oils, fats, and 
    protein (Ref. 2). These rendered products are used as ingredients to 
    provide essential nutrients in animal feed. However, there are 
    processes other than rendering, such as drying, in which slaughter 
    byproducts are manufactured into feed ingredients.
        Because of the prolonged application of heat and the associated 
    transformation of the tissues, rendering is generally regarded by FDA 
    as a process that ensures that the ingredients pose no threat of 
    disease to animals or to the health of humans who consume animal 
    products such as meat, milk, and eggs. In its role as regulator of 
    rendering practices, FDA has focused on the efficacy of a facility's 
    rendering process in the prevention of disease transmission and the 
    prevention of contamination of the finished products (Ref. 3). FDA has 
    no previous evidence of a human or animal health TSE hazard or any 
    other health hazard associated with the feeding of adequately rendered 
    ingredients to animals. Processed animal byproducts have a long history 
    of safe use in the United States as a source of nutrients for animals.
        However, the agent responsible for the transmission of BSE and 
    related TSE diseases is not well characterized. It is believed to be a 
    cattle variant of the sheep scrapie agent (Refs. 4 and 5). As explained 
    more fully below, epidemiological evidence from the United Kingdom 
    suggests that a disease agent contained in sheep may have survived the 
    rendering process to cause BSE in cattle. This is the first reported 
    instance in which it is suspected that a disease agent survived 
    rendering.
        The occurrence of BSE in cattle has not been shown to cause a TSE 
    disease in humans (Ref. 6). On the other hand, the possibility of a 
    causal relationship has not been disproved. BSE has not been diagnosed 
    in cattle in the United States (Ref. 7). However, sheep scrapie is 
    present in the United States. Accordingly, the agency believes that the 
    potential implications for humans as well as animal health require 
    regulatory action to minimize the possibility for the introduction of 
    the disease into U.S. cattle. For reasons described more fully below, 
    FDA is proposing that any feed ingredient that contains specified offal 
    from adult sheep or goats is a food additive when added to the feed of 
    ruminants.
    
    B. Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSE's)
    
        TSE's are progressively degenerative central nervous system (CNS) 
    diseases of man and animals that are characterized by a long incubation 
    period, a relatively short clinical course of neurological signs, and a 
    100-percent mortality (Ref. 8). TSE's are believed to be caused by 
    abnormal isoform neuronal membrane proteins which contain no detectable 
    nucleic acids, are resistant to most methods of sterilization, and 
    survive severe environmental conditions such as 360  deg.C dry heat 
    (Refs. 6 and 9). The agent, however, is not generally believed to be a 
    virus, but rather a protein devoid of nucleic acid components. Nucleic 
    acid components are characteristic of other living microorganisms. 
    These proteins have been termed prions, and are abnormal forms of 
    proteins already present in all animals (Refs. 10 and 11). In most 
    cases the natural route of exposure to the TSE agent is suspected to be 
    oral, although genetic disposition is known to play a role in some 
    cases of sheep scrapie and human TSE diseases including Creutzfeldt-
    Jakob disease, and Gerstmann-Straussler Syndrome (Ref. 12).
        Antemortem diagnostic tests for the detection of TSE do not exist. 
    Postmortem tests are required to confirm suspected TSE cases. The 
    observation of histopathological changes in the brain, such as 
    vacuolization of the brainstem, are positive indicators (Ref. 13). 
    Other diagnostic tests available are immunohistochemical staining and 
    immunoblotting the abnormal protein (Ref. 14). Detection and titration 
    of the TSE agent can also be accomplished by intracerebral inoculation 
    in mice or hamsters with a brain homogenate from a suspected animal. 
    After an appropriate incubation period, the brain of the laboratory 
    animal is examined for histopathological changes characteristic of TSE 
    (Ref. 15).
    1. Sheep Scrapie
        Scrapie is a slowly progressive, transmissible disease of the CNS 
    in sheep and goats. Scrapie is characterized by a prolonged incubation 
    period averaging 2 years, followed by a clinical course of 2 to 6 
    months when the animal exhibits sensory and motor malfunction, 
    depression, and death. The agent presumably moves from infected to 
    susceptible animals by direct or indirect contact and enters through 
    the gastrointestinal tract. Consequently, its spread is both vertical 
    (mother to offspring in utero) (Ref. 16) and horizontal (direct 
    contact) between sheep (Ref. 15). Early signs of scrapie include subtle 
    changes in behavior or temperament which may be followed by scratching 
    and rubbing against fixed objects. Other signs include loss of 
    coordination, weight loss despite a good appetite, biting of feet and 
    limbs, tremor around head and neck, and unusual walking habits (Ref. 
    17). Since there is no detectable immune response to scrapie, diagnosis 
    of scrapie in live sheep is possible only when clinical signs are 
    evident and must be confirmed by histopathology at postmortem (Ref. 
    14).
        The scrapie agent may be identified in lymphatic tissue (spleen, 
    thymus, tonsil, and lymph nodes) in sheep with preclinical infections; 
    however, in clinically affected adult sheep, the agent is identified in 
    the intestines, nervous tissues (brain and spinal cord), and lymphatic 
    tissues (Ref. 15). The brain has been shown to contain by far the 
    highest scrapie infectivity of any body tissue.
        Scrapie is known to have existed in Britain, Ireland, France, and 
    Germany for over 200 years. It has been observed in the United States 
    and Canada for about 50 years. The first case of scrapie in the United 
    States was diagnosed in Michigan in 1947. From 1947 through January 
    1993, approximately 653 flocks have been diagnosed with scrapie (Ref. 
    18).
        In 1993, there were estimated to be a total of 11 million sheep in 
    112,000 flocks in the United States. At the present time, there are 108 
    known scrapie-infected flocks (flocks with sheep diagnosed with 
    scrapie) containing a total of 7,430 sheep, and there are 13 known 
    scrapie-source flocks (flocks to which scrapie-infected sheep were 
    traced) containing a total of 3,418 sheep (Ref. 19).
        In the absence of an antemortem diagnostic test, it is not possible 
    to establish with absolute certainty that a flock is free of scrapie 
    infection. Moreover, lack of reporting, the long incubation period, and 
    open range husbandry practices in the western United States make it 
    difficult to detect classical clinical signs and accurately monitor 
    scrapie in the United States.
    2. Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE)
        BSE was first recognized as a new cattle disease by researchers at 
    the Central Veterinary Laboratory of the British Ministry of 
    Agriculture, Fisheries, and Foods at Weybridge, England in November 
    1986. In retrospect, the literature indicates that the first clinical 
    case of BSE may have been observed as early as April 1985 (Ref. 20). As 
    of September 1993, there have been more than 100,000 confirmed cases of 
    BSE in England, Scotland, and Wales. In the United Kingdom, 44 percent 
    of the dairy herds and 9 percent of the beef herds are infected (Ref. 
    21). BSE has also been reported in Northern Ireland, the Republic of 
    Ireland, Switzerland, France, Oman, and the Falkland Islands (Ref. 22).
        BSE is a transmissible, slowly progressive, degenerative disease of 
    the CNS of adult cattle. This disease has a prolonged incubation period 
    in cattle following oral exposure (2 to 8 years) and is always fatal. 
    BSE is characterized by abnormalities of behavior, sensation, posture, 
    and gait. These signs are similar to those seen in sheep that are 
    infected with scrapie. BSE is associated with spongiform lesions in the 
    gray matter neuropil of the brainstem and neuronal vacuolization (Ref. 
    21). The clinical signs usually begin with changes in animal behavior 
    that are suggestive of apprehension, anxiety, and fear. There is 
    increased reaction to sound and touch. A swaying gait is sometimes 
    coupled with high stepping of the feet and is most evident in the hind 
    limbs. Changes in the normal behavior of the individual cow may also 
    include separation from the rest of the herd while at pasture, 
    disorientation, or excessive licking of the nose or flanks (Ref. 23). 
    The most common history given by the herdsman was nervousness or 
    altered behavior or temperament, weakness associated with pelvic limb 
    ataxia, paresis, and loss of body weight (Ref. 24).
        In some animals there are few gross pathological changes at 
    necropsy associated with BSE other than the loss of body weight. 
    However, postmortem histopathology of BSE distinguish it from other 
    neurological disorders (Refs. 25 and 26).
    3. Other Animal TSE's
        Transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) is a mink disease with 
    clinical signs and brain lesions similar to those of sheep infected 
    with scrapie. The development of TME on a mink farm that reportedly fed 
    only cattle byproducts has led some to believe that BSE exists at a low 
    level in the United States (Ref. 27). TME is a rare disease in the 
    United States, with only 5 outbreaks (involving 11 mink farms) reported 
    in the last 50 years. Based on available evidence, the U.S. Department 
    of Agriculture (USDA) has concluded that the byproducts from United 
    States cattle are unlikely to have caused the TME outbreak on the mink 
    farm (Ref. 28).
        Other animals have TSE's with typical characteristics of long 
    incubation, neurological degeneration, and a 100-percent death rate. 
    These include elk and deer (Refs. 29 and 30), zoo ruminants (Refs. 31, 
    32, and 33), and domestic cats (Refs. 34 and 35).
    
    C. The Association Between Scrapie and BSE
    
        Epidemiological studies of the outbreak of BSE in the United 
    Kingdom, including a computer simulation of the BSE epidemic, have 
    characterized it as an extended common-source epidemic. Each case has 
    been considered a primary case resulting from exposure to a single 
    common source of infection. It is believed that rendered feed 
    ingredients contaminated with sheep scrapie and BSE agents served as 
    the common source of infection. One study demonstrated that meat and 
    bone meal could be incorporated into the cattle feed in sufficient 
    quantity to initiate clinical BSE in some of the animals that consumed 
    the feed (Ref. 36). Thus far, other research has not confirmed that the 
    feeding of scrapie-infected feed ingredients to cattle produces BSE. 
    Therefore, the theory that BSE evolved naturally in cattle has not been 
    ruled out (Ref. 37). Furthermore, the United Kingdom studies suggest 
    that the spread of BSE appeared to have been exacerbated by the 
    practice of feeding ingredients from rendered BSE-infected cattle to 
    calves, a practice that was subsequently banned. Incomplete immediate 
    compliance with the feeding ban may account for the fact that some 
    calves born after the ban continue to be infected with BSE has 
    complicated any theory of vertical transmission of the disease. 
    Maternal transmission has been documented, but at a rate insufficient 
    to maintain the epidemic (Ref. 38).
        Investigators have identified major risk factors that apparently 
    contributed to the emergence of BSE epidemic in the United Kingdom 
    (Refs. 39 to 42). These include:
        (1) A large sheep population, relative to cattle population;
        (2) A high scrapie incidence rate;
        (3) The practice of feeding rendered products from BSE-infected 
    cattle to young cattle at high amounts (up to 4 percent of the diet);
        (4) The feeding of greaves. In the United Kingdom, whole dead 
    animals were processed as a source of tallow. The remaining unextracted 
    bone and protein solids, termed ``greaves,'' were used as dairy calf 
    feed. The greaves may have contained the BSE agent. This practice is 
    not followed in the United States and has stopped in the United 
    Kingdom; and
        (5) Changes in the rendering process. In 1981-1982, the rendering 
    industry in the United Kingdom reduced the use of hydrocarbon solvent 
    extraction in the rendering process (Ref. 43). The United States 
    rendering industry had taken this step in the 1970's. The appearance of 
    BSE in the United Kingdom approximately 3 years after the change in the 
    rendering process is consistent with the 2- to 8-year incubation period 
    of BSE. The epidemiological evidence has suggested that changes in the 
    solvent extraction process was the major factor responsible for 
    initiating a BSE epidemic in the United Kingdom. Furthermore, 
    laboratory tests based on intracerebral injection studies in rodents 
    indicated that the hydrocarbon extraction method inactivated the 
    causative agent while the heat method did not inactivate the scrapie-
    like agent present in rendered animal byproducts (Refs. 13 and 40). The 
    heat extraction method is the most common rendering process currently 
    in use world wide.
    
    D. Historical Efforts To Control BSE
    
    1. United Kingdom Regulatory Actions
        Regulatory controls taken to manage the BSE epidemic in the United 
    Kingdom and to address public health concern include: (1) An action in 
    June 1988 to make the disease reportable; (2) a ban in July 1988 on the 
    feeding of ruminant-derived protein supplements to other ruminants; (3) 
    an order in August 1988 for the compulsory slaughter and incineration 
    of BSE suspect cattle; (4) a ban in November 1988 on the human 
    consumption of specified offals (including brain, spinal cord, thymus, 
    spleen, tonsils, and intestines) of ruminants; and (5) a ban in 
    September 1990 of feeding any ingredient containing specified offals to 
    all pet and farm animals.
        The Office Internationale Epizootics (OIE) has supported the U.K. 
    ban on the use of specified offals and has recommended that the same 
    action be taken in other countries with a high incidence of the disease 
    (Ref. 44). OIE has recommended that British manufacturers of human and 
    animal drugs and biologics not use source material from BSE-positive 
    countries.
    2. United States Regulatory Actions
        The USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has had 
    a scrapie control program in effect since 1952. This program has been 
    responsible for the relatively low incidence of the disease in the 
    United States. In December 1991, APHIS placed a ban on importation of 
    certain products of ruminant origin from countries known to have BSE 
    (56 FR 63865, December 6, 1991). These products include meat-and-bone 
    meal, bone meal, blood meal, offal, fat, and glands. In addition to 
    prohibiting the materials listed above, the regulation requires that 
    imported meat for human or animal consumption from the ruminants in the 
    Bovidae family (e.g., cattle) be deboned, with visible lymphatic and 
    nervous tissue removed; that it be obtained from animals which have 
    undergone a veterinary examination prior to slaughter; and that it be 
    obtained from ruminants which have not been in any country in which BSE 
    has been reported during a period of time when that country permitted 
    the use of ruminant protein in ruminant feed.
        In addition to these import restrictions, APHIS has increased its 
    surveillance efforts to verify that the United States is free of BSE 
    and to detect the disease should it be introduced into the United 
    States. APHIS is tracing the movement and current health status of 459 
    cattle that were imported from United Kingdom between 1981 and 1989.
        Due to concerns about BSE in the United States, USDA has 
    implemented several programs to monitor United States cattle. 
    Pathologists at Iowa State University and the National Veterinary 
    Service Laboratories (NVSL) of APHIS, USDA, are examining bovine brains 
    submitted to NVSL from the following sources: (1) Foreign animal 
    disease investigations where suspected encephalitic conditions in 
    cattle are reported; (2) Centers for Disease Control laboratories 
    (specimens that were found negative for rabies); (3) the USDA Food 
    Safety and Inspection Service (specimens from nonambulatory, commonly 
    called downer cows); and (4) veterinary diagnostic laboratories in the 
    United States. Between 1989 and October 1993, a total of 1,153 bovine 
    brains have been examined and none of these specimens contained lesions 
    with the characteristics and distribution typical for BSE (Ref. 45). 
    This program is ongoing. Data on the incidence of cattle in the United 
    States showing clinical symptoms of CNS disease that are similar to 
    clinical symptoms of BSE have shown no increase during the past 5 years 
    (Ref. 46).
        To decrease further the incidence of scrapie and the threat of BSE 
    in the United States, APHIS, in 1992, initiated a voluntary 
    certification program for sheep (57 FR 58132, December 9, 1992). Flocks 
    that have not had a diagnosed case of scrapie within 5 years, or a case 
    traced back to the flock in that period, may apply for APHIS 
    certification and be officially identified as such. This new control 
    effort provides a mechanism to recognize flocks as scrapie-free in the 
    absence of a live animal diagnostic test.
    3. Voluntary Ban by Renderers
        In 1989, the National Renderers Association (NRA) and the Animal 
    Protein Producers Industry (APPI) recommended to its members that they 
    stop rendering adult sheep or sheep offal for sale as meat and bone 
    meal for inclusion in cattle feed (Ref. 47). Following adoption of the 
    voluntary ban, the FDA carried out a survey of current practices in the 
    United States for rendering or otherwise disposing of adult sheep 
    carcasses and parts, specifically head, brain, and spinal cord. Limited 
    inspections of rendering plants were conducted to: (1) Assess 
    compliance by United States renderers with the industry imposed 
    voluntary ban on rendering adult sheep for cattle feed; (2) identify 
    rendering plant practices concerning adult sheep; and (3) determine if 
    rendered adult sheep protein byproducts were being sold or labeled for 
    use as feed or feed components for cattle. Of the 19 plants surveyed, 
    15 rendered carcasses or offal of adult sheep. These 15 plants 
    processed more than 85 percent of the adult sheep rendered in the 
    United States. Eleven of the 15 rendered carcasses of adult sheep with 
    heads, 7 of the 15 rendered sheep carcasses separately from other 
    species, 6 of the 15 maintained meat and bone meal from adult sheep 
    separate from meat and bone meal from other species, and 4 of the 15 
    rendered sheep that had died of causes other than slaughter. Six of the 
    11 renderers processing adult sheep with heads had sold meat and bone 
    meal to manufacturers of cattle feed; thus, the rendering industry's 
    voluntary ban was not fully implemented at the time of the survey (Ref. 
    48).
    
    II. The Regulatory Issues
    
        The term ``food'' as defined in the act includes animal feed. 
    Section 201(f) of the act (21 U.S.C. 321(f)) defines food as ``articles 
    used for food or drink for man or other animals'' and ``articles used 
    for components of any such article.'' Furthermore, any substance whose 
    intended use results or may reasonably be expected to result in its 
    becoming a component of food is a food additive unless, among other 
    things, it is GRAS or is the subject of a prior sanction. Section 
    402(a)(2)(C) of the act (21 U.S.C. 342(a)(2)(C)) deems food adulterated 
    ``if it is, or it bears or contains, any food additive which is unsafe 
    within the meaning of section 409 * * * .'' Under section 409(a)(2) of 
    the act (21 U.S.C. 348(a)(2)), a food additive is unsafe unless a food 
    additive regulation or an exemption is in effect with respect to its 
    use or its intended use.
        A food additive regulation is established by the submission and 
    approval of a food additive petition, as provided in 21 CFR 571.1, or 
    on FDA's initiative as provided in Sec. 570.38 (21 CFR 570.38). The 
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs (the Commissioner), on his own 
    initiative or at the request of an interested party, may propose to 
    determine that a substance intended for use in animal feed is not GRAS 
    and is a food additive subject to section 409 of the act and 
    Sec. 570.38. Subsequent to the publication of such a proposal and after 
    consideration of public comments, the Commissioner may issue a final 
    rule declaring the substance to be a food additive and require 
    discontinuation of its use except when used in compliance with a food 
    additive regulation.
    
    A. GRAS Determination
    
        A determination that a substance added directly or indirectly to a 
    food is GRAS is generally based on specific information regarding the 
    composition of the substance, its use, method of preparation, methods 
    for detecting its presence in food, and information about its 
    functionality in food (21 CFR 570.35) as determined by experts 
    qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate the safety 
    of such a substance. A substance added to food becomes GRAS as the 
    result of a common understanding about the substance throughout the 
    scientific community familiar with safety of such substances. The basis 
    of expert views may be either scientific procedures, or, in the case of 
    a substance used in food prior to January 1, 1958, experience based on 
    common use in food (Sec. 570.30(a) (21 CFR 570.30(a))).
        General recognition of safety through experience based on common 
    use in food prior to January 1, 1958, may be determined without the 
    quantity or quality of scientific studies required for the approval of 
    a food additive regulation. However, substances that are GRAS based on 
    such use must be currently recognized as safe based on their pre-1958 
    use. (See United States v. Naremco, 553 F.2d 1138 (8th Cir. 1977); 
    compare United States v. Western Serum, 666 F.2d 335 (9th Cir. 1982).) 
    A recognition of safety through common use is ordinarily to be based on 
    generally available data and information (Sec. 570.30(c)). An 
    ingredient that was not in common use in food prior to January 1, 1958, 
    may achieve general recognition of safety only through scientific 
    procedures.
        General recognition of safety based upon scientific procedures 
    requires the same quantity and quality of scientific evidence as is 
    required to obtain approval of a food additive regulation for the 
    ingredient (Sec. 570.30(b); United States v. Naremco, supra, 553 F.2d 
    at 1143). A substance is not GRAS if there is a genuine dispute among 
    experts as to its recognition (An Article of Drug * * * Furestrol 
    Vaginal Suppositories, 251 F. Supp. 1307 (N.D. Ga. 1968), aff'd 415 
    F.2d 390 (5th Cir. 1969)). Further, general recognition of safety 
    through scientific procedures must be based upon published studies 
    (United States v. Articles of Food and Drug Colitrol 80 Medicated, 372 
    F. Supp. 915 (N.D. Ga. 1974), aff'd, 518 F.2d 743, 747 (5th Cir. 
    1975)), so that the results are generally available to experts. It is 
    not enough, in attempting to establish that a substance is GRAS, to 
    establish that there is an absence of scientific studies that 
    demonstrate the substance to be unsafe; there must be studies that show 
    the substance to be safe (United States v. An Article of Food, 752 F.2d 
    11, 15 (1st Cir. 1985)).
        Conversely, a substance may be ineligible for GRAS status if 
    studies show that the substance is, or may be, unsafe. This is true 
    whether the studies are published or unpublished (50 FR 27294 at 27296, 
    July 2, 1985). If there are studies that tend to support a finding that 
    a particular substance is GRAS, but also studies that tend to support a 
    contrary position, the conflict in the studies, just as a conflict in 
    expert opinion, may prevent the general recognition of the safe use of 
    the substance.
    
    B. Food Additive Status of Specified Offal From Adult Sheep and Goats
    
        The agency recognizes that the processed slaughter byproducts and 
    4-D adult sheep and goats have a long history of use in animal feeds 
    without known adverse effects. However, the evidence for the 
    development of a new pattern of disease transmission now indicates that 
    these ingredients can no longer be categorically regarded as safe. The 
    agency believes that the epidemiological evidence linking the 
    occurrence of BSE in ruminants with the feed ingredients containing 
    specified offal from adult sheep and goats precludes any claim of 
    reliance upon a general recognition of safety as a sufficient basis for 
    the continued use of these specified offals in food.
        The agency reached this conclusion in light of the findings 
    regarding a possible mechanism for the transmission of BSE to ruminants 
    as a result of feed ingredients containing specified offal from 
    scrapie-infected adult sheep and goats, as discussed in section I.B. of 
    this document. FDA cannot determine what level of feed ingredients from 
    processed adult sheep and goat products, if any, is safe in ruminant 
    feed.
        A search of the scientific literature did not reveal information 
    that would provide a basis for the GRAS status of feed ingredients 
    derived from processed adult sheep or goat slaughter byproducts. Nor is 
    the agency aware of a prior sanction for any feed products that contain 
    these products.
        In view of the above, FDA has preliminarily concluded that the 
    addition of specified offal to ruminant feed constitutes, in light of 
    the epidemiological evidence about BSE, the use of an unapproved food 
    additive. A regulation for the use of processed adult sheep- and goat-
    specified offal in ruminant feed is not in effect. Therefore, it is 
    FDA's preliminary conclusion that any ruminant feed that contains such 
    an ingredient is adulterated. Accordingly, FDA is proposing to list 
    specified offal from sheep or goat over 12 months of age in 21 CFR Part 
    589--Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed.
    
    III. Description of the Proposed Rule
    
        The proposed rule would prohibit use of any feed ingredient 
    containing specified offal from sheep and goats over 12 months of age 
    in ruminant feed. Specified offal is defined as any tissue from the 
    brain, spinal cord, spleen, thymus, tonsil, lymph nodes, or intestines 
    (duodenum to anus, inclusive) of sheep or goats, or any processed 
    product that is reasonably expected to contain specified offal.
    
    A. Exclusion of Sheep and Goats Under 12 Months
    
        The exclusion of animal tissues from young animals is based on the 
    observation that sheep less than 12 months old rarely exhibit clinical 
    symptoms of scrapie, although a few cases have been reported in sheep 
    as young as 7 months (Ref. 49). Historically, APHIS scrapie regulations 
    and indemnity programs have used a 12-month cutoff for eligible adult 
    sheep. The NRA and APPI voluntary ban on rendering sheep for cattle 
    feed also used a 12-month cutoff for high-risk sheep. The median age of 
    onset of clinical scrapie is 3 1/2 years, and 82 percent of sheep died 
    of scrapie between the ages of 2 and 5 years (Ref. 14). Based on all of 
    the available data, the agency has tentatively concluded that any 
    ruminant feed ingredients derived from sheep and goats under 12 months 
    of age represent a minimal risk of exposure to the scrapie agent. The 
    agency invites comment on the exclusion of sheep and goats less than 12 
    months old from the proposed ban.
    
    B. Inclusion of Goats
    
        Scrapie is a disease which may affect both sheep and goats. 
    However, in the United States only four cases have been diagnosed in 
    goats (Ref. 18). All four goats were raised with sheep flocks in which 
    sheep scrapie was present. Even though the number of reported cases in 
    goats is low, there may be a substantial number of cases undiagnosed 
    and unreported. Because of the possibility of unreported scrapies in 
    goats, FDA is proposing to include adult goats in this regulation. The 
    agency invites comment on the inclusion of adult goats in the proposed 
    rule.
    
    C. Exemption of APHIS-Certified Flocks
    
        FDA has considered exempting adult sheep and goats from one or more 
    categories of APHIS-certified flocks from this prohibition. This would 
    provide added incentive for producers to enroll in the certification 
    program. On the other hand, such exclusion could cause enforcement 
    difficulties, because of the need for separate identification of sheep 
    and goats from certified flocks. The agency has tentatively decided not 
    to exempt specified offal from certified flocks. However, the agency 
    invites comment on this issue, and will consider adding the exclusion 
    to the final rule.
    
    D. Summary of the Basis for FDA Regulation
    
        Epidemiological studies in the United Kingdom indicate that feeding 
    calves products containing feed ingredients processed from sheep 
    infected with scrapie initiated BSE in cattle. Scrapie-infected sheep 
    flocks are present in the United States, and the scrapie agent is known 
    to survive the rendering procedures currently in use. A 1992 FDA survey 
    showed that renderers have not complied fully with their voluntary ban 
    on selling rendered adult sheep products for use in cattle feed. Thus, 
    to help prevent a BSE outbreak in the United States, regulation and 
    enforcement are needed to ensure that feed ingredients made from 
    specified offal derived from processed slaughter inedibles and 
    carcasses of adult sheep and goats are not used in ruminant feed.
        The agency has considered whether to impose a broader ruminant-to-
    ruminant ban, i.e., a restriction on feeding to cattle and other 
    ruminants the specified offal from all ruminants rather than just from 
    sheep and goats. The purpose of a ruminant-to-ruminant ban would be to 
    prevent the spread of BSE between cows. Since no case of BSE has been 
    documented in the United States under the extensive monitoring 
    described in section I.D.2. of this document, the agency has determined 
    that a broader ruminant-to-ruminant ban is not warranted at this time. 
    If, and when, BSE is documented in the United States, the agency will 
    reevaluate this determination.
        While controlled scientific studies have not established a 
    definitive association between scrapie and BSE, epidemiologic studies 
    have linked the feeding of scrapie infected feedstuffs to cattle with 
    the occurrence of BSE. Therefore, the agency believes the action set 
    forth in this proposal is warranted to minimize the potential risk that 
    scrapie from sheep and goats may result in the introduction of BSE to 
    cattle in the United States in light of the impact that BSE may have on 
    animal and human health. The agency's proposal is consistent with 
    action taken by APHIS, USDA to reduce the risk that BSE will occur in 
    the United States by eliminating scrapie from U.S. sheep.
    
    IV. Environmental Impact
    
        FDA has carefully considered the potential environmental effects of 
    this proposed rule and has concluded that the proposed rule will not 
    have a significant impact on the human environment and that an 
    environmental impact statement is not required. FDA's finding of no 
    significant impact (FONSI) and the evidence supporting that finding, 
    contained in an environmental assessment (EA) prepared under 21 CFR 
    25.31, may be seen in the Dockets Management Branch (address above) 
    between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. FDA invites comments 
    and submission of data concerning the EA and FONSI.
    
    V. Analysis of Impacts
    
        FDA has examined the impacts of the proposed rule under Executive 
    Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96-354). 
    Executive Order 12866 directs agencies to assess all 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, and other 
    advantages; distributive impacts; and equity). The agency believes that 
    this proposed rule is consistent with the regulatory philosophy and 
    principles identified in the Executive Order. In addition, the proposed 
    rule is not a significant regulatory action as defined by the Executive 
    Order and so is not subject to review under the Executive Order.
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to analyze 
    regulatory options that would minimize any significant impact of a rule 
    on small entities. Based on a study conducted for the agency by the 
    Eastern Research Group (ERG), a private consulting firm, FDA has 
    determined the annual costs of the proposed regulation to the affected 
    industries. FDA estimated the annual loss of revenues to the sheep 
    ranching and goat ranching industries to be $2,400,000 and $1,500,000, 
    respectively. FDA further estimated the decrease in profits to the 
    slaughtering and rendering industries due to the decline in 
    slaughtering and rendering activities to be $356,000 per year. 
    Additional disposal costs to slaughterers are estimated to range from 
    $111,000 to $166,000 per year. The effects of the proposed regulation 
    on feed manufacturers are believed to be negligible. Therefore, the 
    agency certifies that the proposed rule will not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, and, under 
    the Regulatory Flexibility Act, no further analysis is required.
        A copy of the ERG report supporting these determinations is on file 
    with the Dockets Management Branch (address above).
    
    VI. References
    
        The following references have been placed on display in the Dockets 
    Management Branch (address above) and may be seen by interested persons 
    between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
        1. AAFCO, ``Official Publication 1993 Association of American 
    Feed Control Officials,'' pp. 128-137, 1993.
        2. John, R. E., ``National Renderers Association Feed Safety 
    Assurance Efforts,'' in a symposium, ``Feed Quality Assurance, A 
    System-Wide Approach,'' p. 67, 1990.
        3. FDA, Compliance Policy Guide 7126.24, ``Rendered Animal Feed 
    Ingredients,'' 1980.
        4. Hope, J. et al., ``Fibrils From Brains of Cows With New 
    Cattle Disease Contain Scrapie-Associated Protein,'' Nature, 
    336:390, 1988.
        5. Kimberlin, R. H., ``Transmissible Encephalopathies in 
    Animals,'' Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research, 54:30-37, 1990.
        6. Taylor, D. M., ``Inactivation of BSE Agent,'' in ``Symposium 
    on Virological Aspects of the Safety of Biological Products,'' 1990.
        7. USDA, ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy Surveillance in the 
    United States,'' 1993.
        8. McCaskey, P. C., ``Spongiform Encephalopathy in Other 
    Species,'' Toxicology Forum, 185-195, 1991.
        9. Brown, P., P. P. Liberski, A. Wolff, and D. C. Gajdusek, 
    ``Resistance of Scrapie Infectivity to Steam Autoclaving After 
    Formaldehyde Fixation and Limited Survival After Ashing at 360 
    deg.C: Practical and Theoretical Implications,'' Journal of 
    Infectious Diseases, 161:467-472, 1989.
        10. Prusiner, S. B. et al., ``Immunologic and Molecular Biologic 
    Studies of Prion Proteins in Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy,'' 
    Journal of Infections Diseases, 167:602-613, 1993.
        11. Stahl, N. and S. B. Prusiner, ``Prions and Prion Proteins,'' 
    FASEB Journal, 5:2799-2807, 1991.
        12. Hsiao, K., ``Mutation of the Prion Protein in Libyan Jews 
    With Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease,'' New England Journal of Medicine, 
    324:1091-1097, 1991.
        13. Kimberlin, R. H., ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy,'' 
    Scientific and Technical Review, 11(2):347-390, 1992.
        14. Detweiler, L. A., ``Scrapie,'' Revue Scientifique et 
    Technique, Office Internationale Epizootics, 11(2):491-537, 1992.
        15. Hadlow, W. J., R. C. Kennedy, and R. E. Race, ``Natural 
    Infection of Suffolk Sheep With Scrapie Virus,'' Journal of 
    Infectious Diseases, 146:657, 1982.
        16. Foster, J. D. et al., ``Studies on Maternal Transmission of 
    Scrapie in Sheep,'' Veterinary Record, 130:341-343, 1992.
        17. Kimberling, C. V., ``Jensen and Swift's Diseases of Sheep,'' 
    Lea and Febiger, pp. 336-340, Philadelphia, 1988.
        18. USDA, APHIS, Veterinary Services, ``Fact Sheet: Scrapie,'' 
    June 1993.
        19. Lang, J., ``Scrapie Progress Report,'' 1(1):1-4, March 15, 
    1993.
        20. Wells, G. A. H., A. C. Scott, and C. T. Johnson, et al., ``A 
    Novel Progressive Spongiform Encephalopathy in Cattle,'' Veterinary 
    Record, 121:419-420, 1987.
        21. Bradley, R., ``Editorial: Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy: 
    The Need for Knowledge, Balance, Patience, and Action,'' Journal of 
    Pathology, 160:283-285, 1990.
        22. Denny, O, A. Doherty, B. Hornlimann, and J. Wilesmith, 
    ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy,'' in ``DxMonitor,'' Summer 1993.
        23. Hueston, W., ``Clinical Signs of BSE,'' in ``Animal Health 
    Insight,'' Summer:4, 1991.
        24. Wilesmith, J. W., G. A. H. Wells, M. P. Cranwell, and J. B. 
    M. Ryan, ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy: Epidemiological 
    Studies,'' Veterinary Record, 123:638-644, 1988.
        25. Wells, G. A. H. et al., ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy: 
    Diagnostic Significance of Vacuolar Changes in Selected Nuclei of 
    the Medulla Oblongata,'' Veterinary Record, 125:521-524, 1989.
        26. Davis, A. J., A. L. Jenny, and L. D. Miller, ``Diagnostic 
    Characteristics of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy,'' Journal of 
    Veterinary Diagnostic Investigations, 3:266-271, 1991.
        27. Marsh, R. F. and R. A. Bessen, ``Epidemiologic and 
    Experimental Studies on Transmissible Mink Encephalopathy,'' in 
    ``Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy--Impact on Animal and 
    Human Health,'' 80:105-112, 1993.
        28. Bridges, V., A. Bleem, and K. Walker, ``Risk of 
    Transmissible Mink Encephalopathy in the United States,'' in 
    ``Animal Health Insight,'' pp. 7-14, USDA Veterinary Services, Fall 
    1991.
        29. Williams, E. S. and S. Young, ``Neuropathology of Chronic 
    Wasting Disease of Mule Deer and Elk,'' Veterinary Pathology, 30:36-
    45, 1993.
        30. Williams, E. S. and S. Young, ``Chronic Wasting Disease of 
    Captive Mule Deer: A Spongiform Encephalopathy,'' Journal of 
    Wildlife Diseases, 16-1:89-98, 1980.
        31. Fleetwood, A. J. and C. W. Furley, ``Spongiform 
    Encephalopathy in an Eland,'' Veterinary Record, April 21, 1990.
        32. Jeffrey, M. and G. A. H. Wells, ``Spongiform Encephalopathy 
    in a Nyala,'' Veterinary Pathology, 25:398-399, 1988.
        33. Kirkwood, J. K. et al, ``Spongiform Encephalopathy in an 
    Arabian Oryx and a Greater Kudu,'' Veterinary Record, 127,17:418-
    420, 1990.
        34. Wyatt, J. M. et al., ``Naturally Occurring Scrapie-like 
    Spongiform Encephalopathy in Five Domestic Cats,'' Veterinary 
    Record, 129:233-236, 1991.
        35. Leggett, M. M., J. Dukes, and H. M. Pirie, ``A Spongiform 
    Encephalopathy in a Cat,'' Veterinary Record, 1990.
        36. Collee, J. G., ``Food Borne Illness--Bovine Spongiform 
    Encephalopathy,'' Lancet, 336:1300-1303, 1990.
        37. Fraser, H. et al., ``Transmission of Bovine Spongiform 
    Encephalopathy and Scrapie to Mice,'' Journal of General Virology, 
    73:1891-1897, 1992.
        38. Robinson, M. M., ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy,'' 
    Foreign Animal Disease, pp. 134-138, 1992.
         39. USDA, APHIS, ``Qualitative Analysis of BSE Risk Factors in 
    the United States,'' 1991.
        40. USDA, APHIS, ``Quantitative Risk Assessment of BSE in United 
    States,'' 1991.
        41. Walker, K. D. et al, ``Comparison of Bovine Spongiform 
    Encephalopathy Risk Factors in the United States and Great 
    Britain,'' Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 
    199:11, 1554-1561, 1991.
        42. USDA, ``A Review of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy in 
    Great Britain and an Update on Risk Factors for BSE in the United 
    States,'' 1993.
        43. Wilesmith, J. W., ``The Epidemiology of Bovine Spongiform 
    Encephalopathy,'' Seminars in Virology, 2:239-245, 1991.
        44. Office Internationale Epizootics, International Animal 
    Health Code, chapter 3.2.13 on BSE, pp. 231-235, July 1993.
        45. USDA, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Emergency 
    Programs Activities, ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) 
    Surveillance Program,'' in ``Foreign Animal Disease Report,'' No. 
    20-3/4, pp. 1-2, 1992, and poster display at U.S. Animal Health 
    Association annual meeting, October 30, 1993.
        46. Fancy, B., W. Hueston, A. Davis, A. Jenny, and L. Miller, 
    ``Retrospective Surveillance for Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy 
    (BSE) in the United States,'' in ``Animal Health Insight,'' pp. 11-
    16, Winter 1991.
        47. Bisplinghoff, F. D., National Renderers Association letter 
    to Animal Protein Producers, 1989.
        48. FDA, ``Report of Findings of Directed Inspections of Sheep 
    Rendering Facilities,'' January 1993.
        49. Lamming, E., ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy and Other 
    Spongiform Encephalopathies,'' in ``The Report of the Expert Group 
    on Animal Feedingstuffs to the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, 
    and Food, the Secretary of State for Health and the Secretaries of 
    State for Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland,'' 1992.
    
    VII. Comments
    
        Interested persons may, on or before November 14, 1994, submit 
    comments to the Dockets Management Branch (address above) written 
    comments regarding this proposal. Two copies of any comments are to be 
    submitted, except that individuals may submit one copy. Comments are to 
    be identified with the docket number found in brackets in the heading 
    of this document. Received comments may be seen in the office above 
    between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
    
    List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 589
    
        Animal feeds, Animal foods, Food additives.
        Therefore, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under 
    authority delegated to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, it is 
    proposed that 21 CFR part 589 be amended as follows:
    
    PART 589--SUBSTANCES PROHIBITED FROM USE IN ANIMAL FOOD OR FEED
    
        1. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 589 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 201, 402, 409, 701 of the Federal Food, Drug, 
    and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321, 342, 348, 371).
    
        2. New Sec. 589.2000 is added to subpart B to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 589.2000  Specified offal from sheep and goats over 12 months old.
    
        (a) The Food and Drug Administration has determined that specified 
    offal from sheep and goats over 12 months old is not generally 
    recognized as safe for use in ruminant feed and is a food additive 
    subject to section 409 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the 
    act). The Food and Drug Administration has determined that specified 
    offal from sheep and goats over 12 months old is not prior sanctioned 
    for use in ruminant feed. In the absence of a regulation providing for 
    its safe use as a food additive under section 409 of the act, the use 
    in ruminant feed of ingredients containing specified offal from sheep 
    and goats over 12 months old causes the feed to be adulterated and in 
    violation of the act, unless it is subject to an effective notice of 
    claimed exemption for a food additive under Sec. 570.17 of this 
    chapter.
        (b) For purposes of this part, the term ``specified offal'' means 
    any tissue from the brain, spinal cord, spleen, thymus, tonsil, lymph 
    nodes, or intestines (duodenum to anus, inclusive) of sheep or goats or 
    any processed product that is reasonably expected to contain specified 
    offal. Processed products that may contain specified offal include, but 
    are not limited to, meat meal, meat and bone meal, animal byproduct 
    meal, meat byproducts, glandular meal, and cooked bone meal.
    
        Dated: August 16, 1994.
    Linda A. Suydam,
    Interim Deputy Commissioner for Operations.
    [FR Doc. 94-21278 Filed 8-26-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-01-F
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/29/1994
Department:
Food and Drug Administration
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
94-21278
Dates:
Written comments by November 14, 1994. FDA is proposing that any final rule that may issue based upon this proposal become effective 30 days after its publication in the Federal Register).
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: August 29, 1994, Docket No. 93N-0467
CFR: (2)
21 CFR 570.38
21 CFR 589.2000