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Cholestin OK says Utah judge

(Reuters Health)

A Federal District Court in Utah on Wednesday ordered the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to lift its ban on the importation of red yeast rice that is used in the manufacture of Cholestin, a dietary supplement used to manage cholesterol levels.

Judge Dale A. Kimball ruled that Cholestin is not a drug and can be sold by its manufacturer, Pharmanex, as a dietary supplement. The FDA had asserted that that Cholestin was a drug because it contains mevinolin, a constituent of red yeast rice that is chemically identical to lovastatin, the active ingredient in the cholesterol-lowering drug, Mevacor.

Last May, the FDA banned importation of the red yeast rice. However, as reported by Reuters Health on June 18, Judge Kimball issued a preliminary injunction against the FDA's ban.

"This decision also reflects that good science, while contributing to the health of Americans, does not transform a natural health supplement into a drug," said Bill McGlashan, president of Simi Valley, California-based Pharmanex.

According to a statement issued by the company, the FDA had not questioned the safety of the supplement during the course of litigation.

Jonathan Emord, an attorney for the American Preventive Medical Association, a trade group that represents dietary supplement manufacturers, said that the ruling is "an important decision because it limits the ability of the FDA to wrongfully contend that statements of nutritional support are unapproved health claims."

He told Reuters Health in an interview on Thursday that the court had correctly rejected the FDA's assertion that the mention of a cholesterol-lowering effect on Cholestin's label implied a health claim.

The court reasoned that since cholesterol levels fluctuate naturally in people, a statement that the product can lower cholesterol does not necessarily imply that the product can prevent atherosclerosis.

Emord noted a court decision from last month that ordered the FDA to allow the use of disclaimers on dietary supplement labels. As reported by Reuters Health on January 20, the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit had ruled that the FDA's regulations that prohibit claims of benefits of nutrients were invalid because they violated the First Amendment to the Constitution.

"What was a high, impenetrable wall is now porous," according to Emord. He said that the two court decisions would likely result in a flood of health information that the FDA had previously prevented from reaching consumers.

 

 

Copyright ©1998 Reuters Ltd..

 



 

 

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