Juul seeks US authorization for its new age-restricted menthol pods
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[December 20, 2023]
(Reuters) - Juul Labs said on Tuesday it was seeking U.S.
authorization for its new menthol-flavored pods, which require user age
verification, to be used with its e-cigarette device that is under
review by regulators.
Juul's e-cigarettes were briefly banned in the U.S. in June 2022 after
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) concluded the company had
failed to show that the sale of its products would be appropriate for
public health. Following an appeal, the health regulator put the ban on
hold and agreed to an additional review of Juul's marketing application.
The company's new menthol-flavored pods have a nicotine concentration of
18 mg/mL and are Juul's latest premarket tobacco product application to
the FDA.
This follows an application it made in July for a vaporizer with a
unique Pod ID chip to prevent the use of counterfeit cartridges and
restrict underage access. The July application included a proposal for
tobacco-flavored pods.
The vaporizer is already on sale in the UK after its launch in 2021 as
the JUUL2 System.
The menthol pod contains a secure microchip that communicates a
requirement for age verification to the device prior to use. The device
can be locked by users at any time to prevent unauthorized usage.
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Flavored e-cigarette products are seen on a store shelf in Raleigh,
North Carolina, U.S., June 23, 2022. REUTERS/Arriana Mclymore/File
Photo
To mitigate the risk of social
sourcing, Juul said it would limit not only the number of devices
that can be purchased, but also the number of new devices each
unique age-verified user can activate and use with menthol-flavored
pods.
So far the FDA has authorized only 23 e-cigarette
products for sale in the United States, all of them
tobacco-flavored. The agency has denied menthol e-cigarette
applications from several high-profile manufacturers, including
British American Tobacco, which is appealing those decisions.
Juul said in a statement it has submitted evidence showing its new
menthol pods can help more cigarette smokers transition from smoking
than tobacco-flavored e-cigarettes.
(Reporting by Annett Mary Manoj in Bengaluru and Chris Kirkham in
Los Angeles; Editing by Pooja Desai)
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