The FDA said in a statement that it hopes to make more efficient
"pathways" for companies to introduce and market cannabis and
cannabis-derived products, including cannabidiol (CBD) into
interstate commerce.
"We recognize the potential opportunities that cannabis or
cannabis-derived compounds could offer and acknowledge the
significant interest in these possibilities," FDA Commissioner Scott
Gottlieb said in the statement, adding that the agency will hold a
public meeting to gather input.
Hemp is a type of cannabis plant with no or extremely low
concentrations of the psychoactive compound known as THC, the
ingredient in marijuana associated with "high" feelings.
The Farm Bill removed hemp from the Controlled Substances Act,
allowing for its commercial production in the United States, as long
as those plants contain no more than 0.3 percent of THC.
"I think it's really a game changer," Joshua Horn, a cannabis
industry lawyer, told CNBC. "The significance is now you have some
aspect of the cannabis world legalized on a federal basis."
CBD is routinely extracted from marijuana, another type of cannabis
plant, that has high contents of THC. Cannabis industry experts say
it can also be obtained from hemp plants with virtually no THC.
The FDA in June approved CBD for human consumption for the first
time when it issued approval permits for Epidiolex, a drug intended
to treat epilepsy.
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A number of small companies are already selling CBD in oils,
beverages, topical creams and other products, and in some instances
shipping them across state lines.
The market for CBD derived from hemp could reach $22 billion by
2022, according to a report issued earlier this year by the cannabis
industry analysis firm the Brightfield Group, which assumed passage
of the farm bill in its forecast.
Coca-Cola Co in September became one of the largest U.S. companies
to express interest in CBD, saying in a statement that it was
“closely watching the growth of non-psychoactive CBD as an
ingredient in functional wellness beverages around the world.”
Companies currently involved in the CBD market were hopeful that the
FDA would eventually place CBD in the category of food additives
called generally recognized as safe, or GRAS, Jonathan Eppers, chief
executive of the CBD drink company VYBES, said earlier this year.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee and Alex Dobuzinskis in
Los Angeles; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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