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   Cholestin Articles


Cholestin Fight: Judge Sides With The Supplement

THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE
June 17, 1998

Pharmanex of California can continue manufacturing the cholesterol-reducing dietary supplement Cholestin until a decision is made about whether the supplement is a drug, U.S. District Judge Dale A. Kimball ruled Tuesday in Salt Lake City.

The ruling bars the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from blocking imports of milled red yeast rice, the substance that makes up Cholestin.

That frees up about 10 metric tons of the product just as supplies were running out. The last shipment has been stored in Mexico since the FDA imposed the import ban last summer. The red yeast rice is imported from China, and the dietary supplement is encapsulated in a plant in Farmington.

``The judge found that the case we represented showed that the harm to the company was irreparable if the shipment wasn't allowed in, that there was no safety issue,'' said Pharmanex attorney Dan Kracov. ``The company has said all along that the product they produce is a dietary supplement.''

The FDA never contended that Cholestin was not safe. It contended that Cholestin was an unapproved drug masked as a dietary supplement because its active ingredient, ``mevinolin,'' was identical biologically to lovastatin. Lovastatin is the synthetically produced chemical in the prescription medication Mevacor -- an approved drug prescribed for patients with high levels of cholesterol.

FDA officials could not be reached Tuesday for comment on whether they will appeal Kimball's decision to lift the import ban. But the real issue of whether Cholestin will remain on the market long term remains to be decided in the judge's courtroom through a full trial.

During arguments before Kimball on Monday, Pharmanex lawyers argued that the red yeast rice naturally contains lovastatin as well as nine other components that naturally inhibit the synthesis of cholesterol. Red yeast rice has been used as a staple in Asian cuisine for years, they said.

But FDA officials said Pharmanex uses a mutant strain of red yeast rice and manipulates it potency with temperature controls to produce more powerful amounts of lovastatin than naturally occur.

``I'm claiming the strain of yeast . . . is not a traditional strain,'' said Jacquelin Eagle, counsel for the Department of Health and Human Services, the umbrella organization over the FDA. ``When one is able to concentrate, alter or improve a product, that is fine, as long as they don't do it to get a drug.''

Pharmanex attorney Alan L. Sullivan maintained that temperature during fermentation of the rice is not closely controlled, or even monitored. Additionally, he said, ``All you can infer from [Pharmanex using] a single strain is that we're trying to make a consistent product that is a beneficial product.''

Pharmanex's suit against the FDA is the first test case of the 1994 Dietary Supplement and Health Education Act, which assured that such products would be available, and their labels more detailed in their list of ingredients.

The act also prohibits the dietary-supplement industry from using approved pharmaceutical components in its products unless those components were sold as supplements or food before the drug's approval. The industry also is restricted from marketing products as cures, preventions or treatments of disease.

© Copyright 1998, The Salt Lake Tribune

 




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