The FDA today added a nicotine chew to its short list of authorized consumer nicotine products. It becomes the second product authorized in the last seven days, after RJ Reynolds’ Vuse Solo earned a go-ahead last week.
The agency has granted marketing authorization to four variations of Altria’s VERVE—a small three-sided oral product coated with nicotine. The FDA gave the green light to both a soft version (Chews) and a hard one (Discs), each in two mint flavors, and all four containing just 1.5 milligrams of nicotine.
The only problem for consumers is that VERVE was removed from the market in December 2018, at the same time the company shut down its MarkTen and Green Smoke e-cigarette brands. (Exactly two weeks later, Altria announced it was buying a 35 percent share in Juul Labs.)
On top of authorizing a vape and tobacco flavors no one uses, the FDA today announced it would be doing the same for a guitar pick-shaped nicotine “disc” you chew on and, most importantly, is no longer for sale.— Alex Norcia (@Alex_Norcia) October 19, 2021
After submitting Premarket Tobacco Applications (PMTAs) for VERVE in July 2018, Altria subsidiary U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Company continued the back-and-forth process with the FDA even after removing VERVE from the market.
According to the FDA’s “decision summary,” Altria’s PMTA for VERVE did not include any “product-specific” evidence about its risk as a flavored product to youth. Rather, the PMTA used data bridged from previous studies and surveys on other oral products—something the agency now says is not acceptable for flavored vaping products.
It’s not known if this lower bar will apply to other modern oral products like nicotine pouches and lozenges. Altria submitted PMTAs, including more than 66,000 pages of documentation, for all of its On! nicotine pouches—and other manufacturers also have pending PMTAs for flavored pouches and other oral products.
So now we have FDA authorizations on a cigalike using technology from 2010 or a disc shaped dissolvable that’s not as good as nicorette. Lucky us…— Matt Culley (@MattFromSMM) October 19, 2021
“While these are mint-flavored products, data submitted to the FDA show the risk for youth uptake of these particular products is low, and stringent marketing restrictions will help prevent youth exposure,” FDA Center for Tobacco Products Director Mitch Zeller said in a statement. “Importantly, evidence shows these products could help addicted smokers who use the most harmful combusted products completely switch to a product with potentially fewer harmful chemicals.”
It’s questionable whether “addicted smokers” would get any relief from an oral product containing 1.5 mg of nicotine, but it’s also a moot point—at least for now. Altria hasn’t manufactured or sold VERVE since 2018, and the company has not said that it intends to put VERVE back into production.
While it was being test-marketed in Virginia in 2012, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids President Matthew Myers complained that Verve was an example of why the FDA urgently needed to capture authority of non-combustible nicotine products. The FDA did just that in 2016, issuing the Deeming Rule that granted the FDA dominion over all consumer products made with tobacco-derived nicotine.