Mystery of the missing PMNs

The FDA and the pharmaceutical industry are both scratching their figurative heads over packaging suppliers’ apparent hesitancy to use the agency’s new 120-day packaging approval program.

The final pieces to the FDA’s new, eagerly awaited 120-day packaging appoval program are falling into place amid a growing mystery: Packaging suppliers and their customers are ignoring it! The agency finalized last August a rule containing exemptions for filing environmental assessments with pre-manufacture notifications (PMNs) for new food contact substances (FCS). That may help to get the PMNs rolling in. But maybe not. What happens when Congress funds a new $6 million/year program demanded by resin suppliers and packaging buyers and then hardly anybody uses it? Although the PMN program formally opened for business Jan. 18, 2000, and about 25 PMNs have since been filed, that number is far below what the industry and FDA had expected. “We and they are puzzled,” says Steve Hentges, a spokesman for the American Plastics Council. “It has been surprisingly quiet.” The program is open to food additives that are food-contact substances. Notification must include information on the identity and intended use of the FCS and describe the basis for a notifier’s determination that the intended use is safe. The key is that the amount and quality of documentation is far less than what had been needed when a packaging supplier was required to submit an indirect food additives petition. That was the only previous way of getting new packaging approved by the FDA. The FDA has committed to examining PMNs for new packages that are clearly safe within 120 days. If the agency does not object to the PMN within 120 days, the company is free to go to market. In the past, the FDA had 180 days to approve a petition, but in practice the agency requirements tied up companies for years. Often when final approval was eventually granted, a manufacturer’s buyers had lost interest in the packaging change. Mitchell Cheeseman, the FDA official in charge of the program, is also scratching his head over the mystery of the “missing” PMNs. “There is something going on out there,” he states. “I can’t imagine companies are not chomping at the bit.” But contrary numbers stare him in the face.

More petitions in past In 1999, packaging manufacturers submitted approximately 80 new threshold of regulation or indirect food-additive petitions to the FDA. Those are the kinds of petitions that could be submitted as PMNs. Yet Cheeseman says that by late summer, the FDA had received only about 25 PMNs. “I don’t think it is because the industry is being less innovative,” he explains. Hentges surmises that some companies may have held back PMNs because they have been legally required to submit environmental assessments. Cheeseman hopes to get some idea of what, if any, disincentives companies are facing when the FDA receives comments on the proposed rule it issued last July that laid out the ground rules for the program. The fact that there is draft guidance may have inhibited some companies from submitting PMNs. But most industry officials say that the proposed rule looks pretty good. Jerry Heckman, the Heckman in Keller & Heckman, the Washington law firm that represents resin suppliers and packaging manufacturers, calls the proposed rule on the PMN program “generally quite excellent.”

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