Regulating Healthy Lifestyles
by Megan Pellegrini
January 31, 2008
Increased regulation of the vitamin and supplement market will narrow the playing field for contract manufacturers.
On any given week, a new health claim surfaces regarding the benefits of vitamins and supplements. As consumers sift through the data, the rambunctious $16-billion vitamin and supplement industry is adjusting to new Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations that require companies to back up their health claims and ensure proper manufacturing practices. However, instead of slowing down this growing category, these measures are predicted to only increase consumer confidence in and usage of these products, as well as increase brand owners’ reliance on experienced contract manufacturers.
As baby boomers and younger shoppers look for ways beyond diet and
exercise to improve memory, energy, joint, eye and heart health, the
vitamin and supplement category is poised for continued growth. U.S.
consumers are taking active steps to prevent aging and age-related
diseases. Indeed, 180 million consumers take dietary supplements in a
year, reports the Dietary Supplement Education Alliance (DSEA),
Sarasota, Fla. According to Chicago-based research firm
Euromonitor International, multivitamins were the largest single
subsector of the vitamin and dietary supplement category in 2006, with
52 percent of adults in a federally funded study reporting they take
multivitamins. As vitamins and supplements move into more channels,
Euromonitor predicts the category will grow 14 percent from 2006 to
2011, reaching $18 billion in sales.
Focused on Achieving Growth
This fall, the DSEA tapped into consumers’ desires for a healthy
lifestyle with its 2007 “Just Like Me” marketing campaign. The program
publicizes the idea that smart, fun, active people take supplements to
help improve their health. Marketing initiatives by organizations such
as DSEA will help push the segment to expected sales-growth levels. Hoping
to make claims regarding calcium less wordy and confusing to consumers,
last winter the FDA proposed amendments to its current health claims.
The new proposed rule would allow companies to claim that calcium and
vitamin D together have been shown to reduce the risk of osteoporosis.
Also the rule would eliminate references to sex, race and age; the
mechanism by which calcium reduces the risk for osteoporosis; and the
limited benefit of calcium intake higher than 200 percent of the daily
recommended value. This rule was followed in August with the
FDA’s new Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs) for large manufacturers
of dietary supplements. The GMPs require manufacturers to account for
the accuracy of their products’ labeling, purity, strength, composition
of ingredients and other quality-control procedures. Despite
the FDA’s intentions, some industry observers question whether the
agency has the authority and resources to implement the new guidelines.
“Does the FDA have the authority to enforce these guidelines?
Yes,” says Thomas T. Tierney, president of Vitatech International Inc.,
based in Tustin, Calif. “Do they have the resources? No. Will you be
one of the unlucky ones selected for enforcement? Possibly. Do you have
a big appetite for risk? Do your customers?” Many contract
manufacturers and supplement manufacturers already have been following
these guidelines to comply with pharmaceutical GMPs, or began to once
the proposed rules were announced. The new rulings “are not
nearly as ‘strict’ as we had expected and more closely resemble food
GMPs than drug GMPs,” says Jeffrey L. Geil, sales and marketing manager
for P.J. Noyes Co. Inc., based in Lancaster, N.H. “Given these
reasonable new guidelines for supplements, I suspect that those
companies now producing supplements will actively work toward
implementing the dietary GMPs rather than lose current business to the
competition.” He notes that he has had only a few calls from
people now looking for FDA-registered facilities, or at least those
companies practicing cGMPs (current GMPs) as a result of the new
guidelines. Many contract manufacturers, however, say that the
regulations do have teeth and will narrow the playing field by raising
the bar for quality control. “The need for — really, not lip service —
GMP-compliant contract manufacturers will grow,” Tierney says.
“Marginal producers will fall by the wayside. The marketplace will eat
them for lunch because a non-compliant manufacturer places a product
line at regulatory risk.” Those companies that are manufacturing
out of questionable facilities will disappear or need to find a good
manufacturer, notes Raymond Baribeau, director of private label sales
and regulatory affairs, Confab Laboratories Inc., based in
Saint-Hubert, Quebec. “For consumers, though, it’s big,” he
says, for increasing confidence in supplements. “Because they are sure
of the product source, they will feel it is dependable and high
quality.” Smaller brand owners may decide not to invest in
creating their own manufacturing facilities because of the investment
now needed for equipment, time and resources to meet the GMPs, says
Elliot Balbert, past president and current board member of the DSEA.
It’s better for them to go to a company that specializes in
manufacturing and is compliant with GMPs. “The DSEA
wholeheartedly supports and is delighted that the GMPs were adopted,
and at the very least presented,” he says. “I do believe there could be
some speed bumps with certain details that will be extremely difficult
for some contract manufacturers to implement. But they are a real bonus
to contract manufacturers who exceed them in a cost-efficient and
effective manner.” Effective in June 2008, the FDA’s Interim
Final Rule (IFR) establishes a petition process for a manufacturer to
apply for exemption from the 100 percent identity testing requirements
for dietary ingredients used in manufacturing dietary supplements. If a
manufacturer is granted an exemption, the manufacturer still would be
responsible for ensuring the quality of the final dietary supplement
product and demonstrating that less than 100 percent identity testing
does not diminish its assurance that the dietary ingredient is the
correct ingredient. Although Vitatech is already fully
compliant, Tierney notes that GMP compliance raises more procedural
challenges than just identity testing. “Our industry peers
have to do some rigorous soul searching about conditional release,
shipment of product under quarantine and finding false comfort in
Certificates of Assay, which are not actually accomplished by
raw-material brokers but by their suppliers in another country,” he
says. Physical audits of raw-material suppliers will be challenging for
manufacturers, as will be any complete redesigns of manufacturing
facilities, he emphasizes.
Boomers Drive Category
Without tighter FDA regulation, the volatility of the vitamin and
dietary supplement market would only continue, notes Euromonitor’s
August 2007 vitamin and supplement report. Media coverage of good and
bad scientific evidence can hold great sway on supplement sales. For
example, after a November 2006 study found that the compound
resveratrol in red wine showed anti-aging properties in mice, sales of
supplements based on this red-wine extract and red wine itself spiked. Aging
baby boomers likely will drive most of the vitamin and supplement
category growth, particularly as the number of individuals 50 and older
is expected to grow 13 percent between 2005 and 2011, says David
Daniel, director of contract packaging for Progressive Laboratories
Inc., based in Irving, Texas. And they will clearly be interested in
heart and brain health, obesity, cholesterol, joint health and bone
density, he points out. Naturally, these consumers are drawn
to omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oils, also known as marine lipids,
because they may reduce cardiovascular risk, support healthy joint
function and improve mobility; help maintain healthy brain function in
children and aging adults; and may support immune response and prevent
asthma. This product class has shown dramatic growth — more than 30
percent per year for the past five years, according to Kenn Israel,
vice president of marketing at Santa Ana, Calif.-based Robinson Pharma
Inc., a contract manufacturer of nutritional products and a soft gel
encapsulator of fish oils. In addition to omega-3 oils,
consumers continue to request probiotics and evidence-based science to
back up products’ health claims, says Tierney. And products with added
protein also seem to be a leading innovation. “With the increase in
consumer knowledge of the health benefits of protein, hence the
increase in demand for protein, companies are starting to respond,”
says Nicole Lemus, director of sales, contract manufacturing, Century
Foods International, based in Sparta, Wis. Younger consumers
are not paying as much attention to vitamins and supplements as
boomers, but are showing more interest in quick energy pick-me-ups
through capsules and drinks, Daniel says. “Clearly, there are
omega-3 products oriented toward almost every segment of the
population,” Israel says. “This trend shows no signs of abating with
continued growth expected in both dietary supplements and functional
foods. “Children’s nutrition is also a fast-growth segment with
specific focus on improving attention and learning,” Israel adds. “The
primary application and demand driver continues to be cardiovascular
wellness. Women continue to be the dominant purchasers of dietary
supplements, so women’s health receives lots of attention from
marketers.”
Delivering Quality Products
The delivery systems used for supplements and vitamins continue to receive a lot of attention, with soft gels, effervescent and stick-pack products gaining in popularity, particularly in Europe. “We’ll also see more blurring of the line between functional foods and dietary supplements,” Israel says. “Dietary supplements will need to be more functional and better tasting.” These improvements in delivery systems are driving sales. “Over the past three to five years, omega-3 supplement manufacturers have significantly reduced fishy smells and the products are easier to digest,” Israel adds. “This has driven the increase in customer acceptance and has helped recruit new users and maintain existing customers. The whole category has improved because of delivery-system improvements.” The DSEA’s Balbert notes there aren’t as many new products being launched in today’s market, but there is stronger scientific support for existing categories and new formats for delivery systems. Delivery systems such as effervescent products, time-release capsules and vitamin water (although he notes vitamin water is more of a marketing ploy than a delivery system) have really impacted the current marketplace, as have products that cross over into the food segment such as bars and drinks with value-added vitamins and supplements. Yet, what’s imperative with new guidelines, increased consumer exposure and continued growth in the delivery method of vitamins and supplements is the team that produces and sells them. A quality contract manufacturer should allow brand owners the ability to focus on sales and marketing of their product, Lemus says. “Choosing a contract manufacturer who offers full turn-key solutions, adheres to the new GMPs and is financially stable is the key to success,” she says. Moving forward, brand owners and contract manufacturers will continue to address ingredient quality and ingredient sustainability. “We still see wild fluctuations in pricing of key ingredients, primarily due to boom-and-bust cycles driven by reckless competition from suppliers based in China,” Israel says. “Currently vitamin C, a number of B vitamins, and many botanical ingredients are tight. Furthermore, there is growing concern about adulteration of important high-value botanical ingredients such as palmetto berry extract and bilberry fruit extract.” Industry observers note that until four years ago, the vast majority of vitamin and mineral ingredients came from European sources at reasonable prices, with sound science and validation. Those European companies were considered part of the industry, and re-invested in U.S. science and industry to help grow both ends of the business. Chinese companies may offer a quality product at a low price, but they are not investing in science and industry, industry observers say. “In our quest to be price competitive, we have wrestled with overhead costs,” says Balbert. “But don’t sacrifice quality for price alone. Science will be critical going forward.”
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