ECONOMY

FDA Deregulation of E-Cigarettes Saved Lives and Spurred Innovation


What would happen to drug development if the FDA lost its authority to prohibit new drugs? Would research and development boom and lives be saved? Or would R&D decline and lives be lost to a flood of unsafe and ineffective drugs? Or perhaps R&D would decline as demand for new drugs faltered due to public hesitation in the absence of FDA approval? In an excellent new paper Pesko and Saenz examine one natural experiment: e-cigarettes.

The FDA banned e-cigarettes as unapproved drugs soon after their introduction in the United States. The FDA had previously banned other nicotine infused products. Thus, it was surprising when in 2010 the FDA was prohibited from regulating e-cigarettes as a drug/device when a court ruled that Congress had intended for e-cigarettes to be regulated as a tobacco product not as a drug.

As of 2010, therefore, e-cigarettes were not FDA regulated:

…e–cigarette companies were able to bypass the lengthy and costly drug approval process entirely. Additionally, without FDA drug regulation, e–cigarette companies could also freely enter the market, modify products without approval, and bypass extensive post–market reporting requirements and quality control standards.

Indeed, it wasn’t until 2016 that the FDA formally “deemed” e-cigarettes as tobacco products (deemed since they don’t actually contain tobacco) and approvals under the less stringent tobacco regulations were not required until 2020. For nearly a decade, therefore, e-cigarettes were almost entirely unregulated and then lightly regulated under the tobacco framework. So, what happened during this period?

Pesko and Saenz show that FDA deregulation led to a boom in e-cigarette research and development which improved e-cigarettes and led to many lives saved as people switched from smoking to vaping.

The boom in research and development is evidenced by a very large increase in US e-cigarette patents. We do not see a similar increase in Australia (where e-cigarettes were not deregulated) nor do we see an increase in non e-cigarette smoking cessation products (figure 1a of their paper not shown here).

Estimating the decline in smoking and smoking-attributable mortality (SAM) is more difficult but the authors assemble a large collection of data broken down by demographics and they estimate that prohibiting the FDA from regulating e-cigarettes reduced smoking attributable mortality by nearly 10% on average each year from 2011-2019 for a total savings of some 677,000 life-years.

The authors pointedly compare what happened under deregulation of e-cigarettes–innovation and lives saved–with what happened to similar smoking cessation products that remained under FDA regulation–stagnation and no reduction in smoking attributable mortality.

A key takeaway on the slowness of FDA drug regulation is that it took 9 years before nicotine gum could be sold with a higher nicotine strength, 12 years before it could be sold OTC, and 15 years before it could be sold with a flavor. Further, a recent editorial laments that there has been largely non–existent innovation in FDA–approved smoking cessation drugs since 2006 (Benowitz et al., 2023). In particular, the “world’s oldest smoking cessation aid” cyctisine, first brought to market in 1964 in Bulgaria (Prochaska et al., 2013), and with quit success rates exceeding single forms of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) (Lindson et al., 2023), is not approved as a drug in the United States.

The authors conclude, “this situation raises concern that drugs may be over–regulated in the United States…”. Quite so.

Addendum: A quick review on the FDA literature. In addition to classic works by Peltzman on the 1962 Amendments and by myself on what we can learn about the FDA from off-label pricing we have a spate of recent new papers including Parker Rogers, which I covered earlier:

In an important and impressive new paperParker Rogers looks at what happens when the FDA deregulates or “down-classifies” a medical device type from a more stringent to a less stringent category. He finds that deregulated device types show increases in entry, innovation, as measured by patents and patent quality, and decreases in  prices. Safety is either negligibly affected or, in the case of products that come under potential litigation, increased.

and Isakov, Lo and Montazerhodjat which finds that FDA statistical standards tend to be too conservative, especially for drugs meant to treat deadly diseases (see my comments on their paper and more links in Is the FDA Too Conservative or Too Aggressive?)

See also FDA commentary, for much more from sunscreens to lab developed tests.

The post FDA Deregulation of E-Cigarettes Saved Lives and Spurred Innovation appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.



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