Free Newsletters | Help  

  Current | By Company | NEW Products
Login ID:    Password:    Register for a FREE account
 NEWS

Industry News
Business
Organic
Food & Beverage
Sports Nutrition
Nutraceuticals
Regulatory
Research
Products
Practitioners
Retail
Events
People
On-line


 LISTINGS
  Categories
Products

Profiles
Publishers

 OPINION
  Editorials
Interviews
Up and Comers
Quality Initiatives

 
Blogs
Andrew Stewart  
Marc Ullman FYI Blog
Len Monheit Off The Cuff
James S. Tonkin - Formulating Beverages  
Jim Lassiter -- Good News/Bad News
The Nutrition Business Journal Blog

Join the NPIcenter LinkedIn Group Group
Join the Facebook page Page
Follow us on
Join the Facebook page


 FEATURES
 

Newsletter

  News Feeds
 
 SERVICES
  Log in
Register User
Add Company
Career Center
Advertise

 INFO CENTER
  Help
Contact Us
About NPI
Privacy Policy



 

Advertisement



Share Subscribe to NPIcenter Newsfeed

Database for New Dietary Ingredient Notifications Launches
2005-12-02 - American Herbal Products Association (AHPA)




Searchable AHPA NDI Database Developed by AHPA and NPIcenter

The American Herbal Products Association (AHPA) and NPIcenter have collaborated to create a database to access all notifications the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has received for new dietary ingredients (NDIs). The AHPA NDI Database launches on Monday, December 5, 2005, with a one-day-only open access trial period, before the subscription period begins.

The database can be searched by numerous relevant fields, including the generic or brand name of every 75-day notice (botanical and non-botanical), the Latin binomial of herbs, and the name of the company that made the submission. The database also provides a concise “outcome statement” for each file that quickly summarize how FDA has responded to every notification, and the problems, if any, that the agency identified for each.

“New ingredients are key to the supplement industry’s future and the AHPA NDI Database will be a valuable resource for firms that are filing the required notification prior to marketing an NDI, said Michael McGuffin, president of AHPA. “By accessing and reviewing other relevant NDI notifications, companies will be better prepared to file complete submissions and thereby prevent delays to market entry.”

The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) requires manufacturers or distributors of an NDI — an ingredient not sold before DSHEA went into effect in 1994 — to provide information to FDA that is the basis for a conclusion that the ingredient is reasonably expected to be safe (New dietary ingredients that are articles used as food in a form in which the food has not been chemically altered are exempt form the notification requirement described here.).

Since DSHEA passed, FDA has posted almost 300 NDI notifications on its dockets website. However, the only organization provided is by the FDA-assigned report numbers, which makes individual reports very difficult to locate. Even when found, it is impossible to know without opening and examining the entire file (which can run to hundreds of pages) whether a filing was successful or whether (and why) FDA objected to the notification. The AHPA NDI Database was specifically designed to provide faster and more informative access to filed notifications.

The database will be maintained on an ongoing basis; future NDI filings and FDA responses will be promptly added to the system. Special introductory access fees for AHPA members are $125 per year per site / $40 per day per site, and for non-members are $495 per year per site / $125 per day per site. The open-access trial period runs 9 a.m.–6 p.m. Eastern, Monday, December 5, only.

The AHPA NDI Database is accessible at http://ndi.npicenter.com/.

 

Advertisement



Sponsored Links: Featured Links:
 

NPIcenter Address and Phone Number
Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Advertise
New Hope Natural Media

 

SUPPLYEXPO Funtional Foods & Nutraceuticals Magazine Healthy Foods Conferences The Newport Summit - Executive Retreat Nutracon