FDA Belatedly and Arbitrarily Approves Menthol Vapes
The agency's inscrutable approach to harm-reducing nicotine products sacrifices consumer choice and public health on the altar of youth protection.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which until Friday had approved only tobacco-flavored nicotine vaping products, has now officially allowed the sale of menthol-flavored NJOY Daily disposable e-cigarettes and menthol-flavored pods for the previously authorized NJOY Ace device "after extensive scientific review." The decision reflects the FDA's preference for closed, nonrefillable "electronic nicotine delivery systems" (ENDS) and its aversion to letting former smokers buy the flavors they prefer, both of which sacrifice the interests of adult consumers in the name of preventing underage use.
"Evidence submitted by the applicant showed that these menthol-flavored products provided a benefit for adults who smoke cigarettes relative to that of the applicant's previously authorized tobacco-flavored products—in terms of complete switching—that is sufficient to outweigh the risks of the product, including youth appeal," the FDA said. In this case, explained Matthew Farrelly, director of the Office of Science at the FDA's Center for Tobacco Products, "the strength of evidence of benefits to adult smokers from completely switching to a less harmful product was sufficient to outweigh the risks to youth."
The FDA is applying a standard established by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of 2009, which says the agency should approve new nicotine products when they are "appropriate for the protection of the public health." The agency is supposed to take into account "the risks and benefits to the population as a whole, including users and nonusers." That, in turn, entails considering "the increased or decreased likelihood that existing users of tobacco products will stop using such products" as well as "the increased or decreased likelihood that those who do not use tobacco products will start using such products."
In the ENDS context, as Farrelly's comment reflects, that evaluation comes down to weighing the benefit of a given product in helping adult smokers quit against the risk that it will appeal to teenagers. But those judgments, which hinge on predictions of how adults and teenagers will respond to a particular product, are inherently uncertain and debatable. Furthermore, there is no legal formula for weighing the benefit of increased smoking cessation among adults, which entails a dramatic reduction in health hazards, against the risk of underage vaping, which entails a relatively modest increase in health hazards compared to complete nicotine abstinence. And the FDA refuses to consider the benefit of replacing smoking with vaping among teenagers, since it deems any ENDS use by minors unacceptable, even when the long-term effect might be a reduction in tobacco-related morbidity and mortality.
This "public health" standard is a black box in practice, and the FDA's interpretation of it contradicts its statutory mission to minimize risks and maximize benefits for "the population as a whole." It is therefore hard to take Farrelly seriously when he declares that "we are a data driven agency and will continue to follow the science to inform our review of premarket tobacco applications."
The FDA is not simply "follow[ing] the science." It is engaging in fallible predictions and making value judgments about whether adults should be allowed to buy products they want—products that could literally save their lives if they are appealing enough to motivate and maintain the switch from smoking to vaping—based on its perception of the likelihood that teenagers, who are not legally allowed to buy ENDS, might also be inclined to use those products. This approach is a recipe for arbitrary bureaucratic edicts.
The FDA's dubious understanding of its statutory mission is just part of the problem. By charging the agency with conducting a collectivist calculus of how a product might affect "the population as a whole," Congress has invited regulators to restrict consumer choice in service of that hazy mission. Under that standard, it is not enough that adults want to use a particular vaping product, that the product is demonstrably less hazardous than combustible cigarettes, and that replacing the latter with the former will make them healthier and extend their lives. The FDA can still ban the sale of the product based on concerns about underage use.
According to the FDA, that will happen when "the risks to youth" outweigh "the strength of evidence of benefits to adult smokers." That standard is incomprehensible, since these two things are neither precisely measurable nor comparable.
The FDA says NJOY presented compelling evidence that smokers are more likely to successfully switch if they can vape menthol-flavored nicotine e-liquids. Yet that evidence, according to the FDA, applies only to these specific products; it cannot be extended to surmise that the same would be true of other brands. In any case, the "strength" of that evidence, however "strength" is defined, cannot logically be weighed against a "risk" of underage use, however that is defined. It is baffling what units of measurement the FDA purports to be using here.
If the benefits of menthol-flavored ENDS must be established "on a case-by-case basis," as the FDA insists, it is not surprising that the agency refuses to apply similar logic to other flavors. When given the choice, we know from survey data, former smokers prefer flavors other than the two that the FDA has deigned to allow.
Surveys conducted in 2018 and 2020, for example, found that just 30 percent of dual users and switchers most often used tobacco-flavored or unflavored e-liquids, while 17 percent picked "menthol/mint." Most preferred the flavors that are anathema to the FDA because it considers them too kid-friendly. This was especially true for respondents who used the refillable, economical, and versatile tank systems that the FDA abhors, 64 percent of whom favored "fruit/other." In a 2022 study of people who vaped instead of smoking, "sweet flavors were most frequently preferred by participants (44.8%), followed by menthol/mint (34.7%), tobacco (12.6%), and other (7.9%)."
A 2019 study suggested that "multiple flavor use at initiation…may discourage rejecting ENDS," while "current use of traditional cigarette flavors (ie, tobacco, menthol) may promote sustained smoking." A 2022 study similarly found that "e-cigarette users with nontobacco flavors were more likely to succeed in quitting compared to those exclusively using non-flavored or tobacco-flavored e-cigarettes." A 2023 study found that legal restrictions on ENDS flavors were associated with increases in smoking, exactly the opposite of what the FDA is ostensibly trying to achieve.
According to a systematic review published last year, "the evidence about the role of different flavored ENDS use and smoking cessation outcomes is inconclusive, reflecting highly heterogeneous study definitions and methodological limitations." The authors added that "more high-quality evidence, ideally from randomized controlled trials, is required." But it stands to reason that letting smokers buy the ENDS flavors they demonstrably prefer will make them more likely to try vaping and more inclined to stick with it. Conversely, restricting their flavor choices is apt to result in more smoking-related disease and death, which hardly seems "appropriate for the protection of the public health."
The FDA has now conceded that point with regard to menthol ENDS, although it bizarrely insists that the principle applies only to the specific NJOY products it has approved. A more consumer-friendly approach, one that did not make individual choice contingent on inscrutable cost-benefit analyses by bureaucrats, would let adults decide for themselves which products best suit them.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Just vote for Trump and let him eliminate this one too as he cuts federal spending.
*spit take*
You know who else thought poison should be tasty.
I was laughing at the idea of Trump cutting spending.
I was going to say Jews.
Same thing.
How cute. Sarc adopted a refuted nazi.
https://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/commentary/trump-budget-cuts-size-federal-government-bolder-reforms-needed
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/10/business/president-trump-budget-cuts.html
Should I keep going?
Your mom?
Black Flag?
You really want any quack to be able to market dangerous substances as medical treatments?
'The FDA's Belated Approval of Menthol-Flavored E-Cigarettes Epitomizes Its Arbitrary Edicts'
Arbitrary? No chance that a move by a federal agency to appeal to a core demographic just months before a major election is deliberate? How gullible do you think we are?
"How gullible do you think we are?"
Would you like to buy some beach front property in Arizona?
Is that why too many California Democrats moved there?
absolutely spot on.
"The agency's inscrutable approach..." Not that inscrutable to anyone who knows what is coming in November. They already announced that the new rules are put on hold until after the election as if that is not a clue about how arbitrary they are in the first place
But without the FDA, how will we know what's in them?
It would be chaos. The Wild West! Bodies everywhere!
I loved candy cigarettes as a kid and never once confused them with the tobacco variety. Typical statist nannies. Ask them how many kids graduated from chewing candy cigarettes to chewing tobacco cigarettes -- of course they'd say that's a stupid idea! Yet actions speak louder than words, and they act as if kids are that stupid.
Are you aware that Trump directed the FDA to ban flavored vapes to protect the children?
You’re calling Trump a statist nanny.
Are you aware that YOU brought Trump into this conversation, in spite of saying you are fair and balanced?
Would you be attacking me if Biden was responsible? Doubt it. In fact I know for a fact that you would not. No, you’d be starting a rousing chorus of “Fuck Joe Biden!” But because it was Trump you go on the attack. Typical.
There’s a lot of the word “you” in that post.
No! Can't be! He never gets personal.
I’m not attacking you. I’m just curious to see if you can muster the integrity to call Trump a nanny statist for banning flavored vapes, if you’re going to change your mind about it being nanny statist, or just continue to attack while avoiding the question. By bet is c.
Why should *I* have to muster the "integrity" to call Trump a nanny statist when *you* haven't got the integrity to call Biden a nanny statist? YOU brought it up, not me. Do you not have the courage, the *integrity*, of your convictions?
No, of course not. The only thing I'm attacking is your lack of integrity in (a) claiming you never get personal, yet getting personal; and (b) claiming you are neutral when you are the one who dragged Trump into a conversation and blame me for NOT dragging Trump in.
I despise Joe Biden and cannot find a single policy of his that I agree with. Does that satisfy the inquisition?
Weird.
sarcasmic
September.15.2021 at 5:51 pm
Flag Comment Mute User
He’s a bird, singing to his potential conservative mates. Give him a break. Saying “Fuck Joe Biden” on these comments is his only chance of getting laid.sarcasmic
Or the time you said he recognized the constitution. Lol.
Biden is a nanny statist. Trump was a nanny statist. Obama was a nanny statist.
Any politician who says "It's for the children" is a nanny statist.
Your turn.
You only rush in to defend one of those 3 all the time. Need the links?
He rescinded the order. Biden did not.
Youre defending democrats as usual.
Typical that you don't respond to the substance, don't admit you brought up Trump for no reason, and presume to know what I would do under some masturbatory hypothetical.
I’ll take that as confirmation that you did not know that this was ordered by Trump.
Now that you do, are you going to change what you said about this being a statist nanny move?
I’m honestly curious. Because I know that in these comments who matters much more than what. You said the what was nanny statist. Can you say that about the who?
Go on, admit you dragged Trump into a conversation which was not about Trump. Go on, dog. I double-sarc dare you.
I dragged Trump into the conversation because the person who ordered this policy is relevant. Especially if you're going to call the person who ordered it a statist nanny. Is Trump a statist nanny?
Trump rescinded the policy. So how is he relevant?
Again..
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/17/health/trump-vaping-ban.html
I know you saw this just yesterday.
Like this?
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/menthol-cigarettes-biden-fda-ban/
I know you saw the link just yesterday that said he rescinded the order. Causing NYT to cry.
Of course Trump was a statist!
https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/trump-administration-combating-epidemic-youth-e-cigarette-use-plan-clear-market-unauthorized-non
It’s kind of a moot point now anyway because lots of cities and states are banning any and all flavored nicotine products. Which is great for states that do still allow them since it brings in more tax revenue. If you drive south on I-95 through Virginia and stop for gas, you will notice lots of ads for Newpies.
The FDA loves having batteries in landfills - that is my only takeaway here.
...
Relatively modest? Has anybody shown it to be greater than 0?
Depends on what’s in the vape. For nicotine, there’s not so much risk, but if you vape CBD, it can be pretty bad. This is what started the current vape hysteria.
Don't blame FDA, blame Congress. FDA's administration is perfectly reasonable given Congress's wording and FDA's precedents. If Congress didn't want FDA to regulate such products consistently with FDA's history, Congress should've written the statute elsewise.
Yes, the FDA was authorized by congress to regulate tobacco and was signed into law by Obama in 2009, when vaping was still in its infancy. The main point was to regulate cigarettes and make them less addictive and not marketed to kids, but they have changed the least since the law started. It was also supposed to allow less harmful products into the market and this is where it is being enforced, so cigarettes are protected from any serious competition.
So, I'm unclear Jake - is your position that children should be smoking/vaping?
Public health, private health, there must be a difference. Seems smoking is mostly a private function.