NUDE NICOTINE INC. V. FDA, No. 21-71321 (9th Cir. 2023)
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The FDA issued marketing denial orders for Petitioners’ flavored products, finding that Petitioners’ applications lacked sufficient evidence showing that their flavored products would provide a benefit to adult use.
The Ninth Circuit denied petitions for review challenging the denial of Petitioners’ premarket tobacco product applications seeking FDA authorization to sell nicotine-containing e-liquids in the United States. The panel held that the text of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (the “Tobacco Control) Act”) plainly authorizes the FDA to require that manufacturers submit comparative health risk data, which necessarily includes comparisons of flavored e-liquids to tobacco-flavored e-liquids. The panel also held that the FDA did not arbitrarily or capriciously deny Petitioners’ applications and that any error the agency committed by failing to consider Petitioners’ marketing plans was harmless.
The panel held that the FDA did not introduce a new evidentiary standard; rather, it consistently required evidence that evaluated the impacts of flavored versus non-flavored products on initiation and cessation. Further,the panel concluded that, even if the agency erred by failing to consider Petitioners’ marketing plans, any error was harmless, and it would not remand on this basis. Finally, the panel addressed Petitioners’ post-argument motions to supplement the administrative record and file supplemental briefing, seeking judicial notice of a premarket tobacco product application deficiency letter, FDA internal memoranda, and FDA press releases.
Court Description: Food and Drug Administration. The panel denied petitions for review challenging the denial of Petitioners’ premarket tobacco product applications seeking Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) authorization to sell nicotine-containing e-liquids in the United States.
The FDA issued marketing denial orders for Petitioners’ flavored products, finding that Petitioners’ applications lacked sufficient evidence showing that their flavored products would provide a benefit to adult users that outweighs the risks such products pose to youth.
The panel held that the text of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (the “Tobacco Control Act”) plainly authorizes the FDA to require that manufacturers submit comparative health risk data, which necessarily includes comparisons of flavored e-liquids to tobacco-flavored e-liquids. The panel also held that the FDA did not arbitrarily or capriciously deny Petitioners’ applications, and that any error the agency committed by failing to consider Petitioners’ marketing plans was harmless.
First, Petitioners contended that the FDA exceeded its statutory authority by requiring comparative efficacy studies to demonstrate that their flavored products— electronic nicotine delivery systems (“ENDS”)—better promote smoking cessation than comparable tobacco-flavored products. The panel joined the Second, Third, Fourth, Seventh, and D.C. Circuits in holding that the FDA had statutory authority to regulate as it did. The Tobacco Control Act expressly authorized the FDA’s consideration of comparative evidence.
Second, Petitioners argued that that the FDA acted arbitrarily and capriciously by denying their applications to market flavored e-liquids. The panel rejected Petitioner’s first argument that the FDA unfairly surprised them by demanding that they compare their flavored e-liquids to tobacco-flavored ones. Considering the Tobacco Control Act’s purpose and the FDA’s concern regarding the substantial increase in youth initiation prompted by flavored ENDS products, Petitioners cannot plausibly contend that the agency led them to believe a flavor-to-flavor comparison would meet the Act’s requirements. The panel also rejected Petitioner’s second argument—that the FDA purportedly stated that it would accept single-point-in-time studies, like consumer surveys, but ultimately required studies that followed consumers over long time periods. The panel held that the FDA did not introduce a new evidentiary standard; rather, it consistently required evidence that evaluated the impacts of flavored versus non-flavored products on initiation and cessation. The FDA acted in conformity with its previous guidance and reasonably rejected Petitioners’ applications because their other proffered evidence was not sufficiently reliable and robust. The panel held the agency did not act arbitrarily or capriciously by concluding that Petitioners’ evidence fell short.
The panel next turned to Petitioners’ contentions that the FDA’s failure to consider their marketing and sales-access- restrictions plans was arbitrary and capricious. The panel assumed, without deciding, that the FDA erred in ignoring Petitioners’ marketing plans, but concluded that any error was harmless. The Tobacco Control Act incorporates the Administrative Procedures Act’s harmless error rule. Petitioners do not identify how their marketing measures were materially different from those the FDA had already said are insufficient. At the time the FDA reviewed Petitioners’ applications, it had already concluded that eliminating marketing aimed at youth users and monitoring retailers’ sales were ineffective in preventing youth use because children maintained a steady stream of access to the flavored products they desired through alternate means, like their friends and social networks. Accordingly, the panel concluded that, even if the agency erred by failing to consider Petitioners’ marketing plans, any error was harmless, and it would not remand on this basis.
Finally, the panel addressed Petitioners’ post-argument motions to supplement the administrative record and file supplemental briefing, and seeking judicial notice of a premarket tobacco product application deficiency letter, FDA internal memoranda, and FDA press releases. The panel denied the motions to supplement the administrative record and file supplemental briefing and granted the motions for judicial notice.
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