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US FDA authorises flavoured vape products from Altria NJOY's for sale in a first

US FDA authorises flavoured vape products from Altria NJOY's for sale in a first
The authorisation comes at a time when the US government is reviewing a potential ban on menthol cigarettes.
PHOTO: The Straits Times file

WASHINGTON - The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorised four of Altria's menthol e-cigarette products for sale in the country on June 21, making them the first flavoured vapes the agency has permitted on the market.

The decision shows vape makers can provide evidence satisfying the FDA that the benefits their products offer in terms of helping smokers quit outweigh the risks posed to youth.

"In this instance, the strength of evidence of benefits to adult smokers from completely switching to a less harmful product was sufficient to outweigh the risks to youth," said Mr Matthew Farrelly, director of the office of science at the FDA's Centre for Tobacco Products.

The FDA first began regulating e-cigarettes in August 2016, and it has authorised 27 e-cigarette products for sale in the US to date, including Altria-owned NJOY's menthol vape products.

The regulator has rejected the vast majority of the 26 million applications it has reviewed so far, including from British American Tobacco, and all of those relating to flavoured products.

This has sparked pushback from the industry, with manufacturers launching court cases to challenge its decisions, some of which were successful.

The agency's nod to Altria's NJOY menthol vape products was a positive for the broader industry sentiment, and bodes well for flavours ultimately getting back on the market with Bluetooth age-verified technology, Jefferies analyst Owen Bennett said in a note.

The US is the world's largest market for e-cigarettes, and the FDA has had to crack down on the sale and distribution of illicit vapes.

"This decision is especially troubling given the FDA's failure to do its job and clear the market of unauthorised, illegal e-cigarette products," said Ms Yolonda Richardson, chief executive of Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, adding that the decision was "hard to understand".

The FDA's authorisation comes at a time when the US government is reviewing a potential ban on menthol cigarettes.

Earlier in June, the FDA rescinded market denial orders issued in 2022 for four varieties of Juul Lab's tobacco and menthol-flavoured pods and its e-cigarette device.

ALSO READ: Now I won't touch them, says British teen who suffered collapsed lung from vaping

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