On Wednesday, August 21st, Pulse Canada hosted an expert panel workshop in Toronto on the potential for a health claim related to Lentils and Post-prandial Glycaemia in Toronto. Invited delegates to the workshop included over 30 representatives from the pulse industry, food industry, academia as well as and regulatory experts. The purpose of the workshop was to provide a forum in which to discuss a systematic literature review that was conducted in 2012 by Nutrasource Diagnostics Inc (NDI) with respect to achieving a health claim related to lentils and short term blood sugar control in Canada, the US or the EU.
Krista Coventry from NDI presented a background on the regulatory frameworks in Canada, the US, the EU and Australia/New Zealand.
3. Generally speaking, a food health claim is
considered to be “any representation in labelling
and advertising that states, suggests or implies
that a relation exists between the consumption of
foods or food constituents and health”
Codex Alimentarius Commission, 2004
REGULATORY DEFINITION:
HEALTH CLAIM
6. • Foods, as well as claims related to
health that appear on packaging
or in advertising of foods
in Canada, must comply with:
The Consumer Packaging and
Labelling Act (1971)
the Food and Drugs Act (1985)
the Food and Drug Regulations
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (CANADA)
REGULATIONS
9. • No specific regulations governing use;
• No standardized nutritional criteria required;
• Do not refer to a specific health effect, disease,
or health condition;
• Can promote choosing a food for overall health
or promote healthy eating;
• Can provide dietary guidance, such as:
“Healthy for you...”
“Healthy choice...”
FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS (CANADA)
GENERAL HEALTH CLAIMS
10. • Function claims refer to the
maintenance and/or support of
body functions associated with the
maintenance of good health or
performance
FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS (CANADA)
FUNCTION HEALTH CLAIMS
“Coarse wheat bran helps to promote regularity.”
11. • Link consumption of food or food
constituents to a reduced risk of developing
a diet-related disease or condition in the
context of the total diet.
FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS (CANADA)
DISEASE-RISK REDUCTION CLAIMS
12. Sodium, potassium and hypertension
Calcium, vitamin D and osteoporosis
Saturated and trans fat and heart disease
Vegetables, fruit and some cancers
Non-fermentable carbohydrates and
dental caries
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (CANADA)
APPROVED DISEASE/RISK-REDUCTION CLAIMS
13.
14. Enable consumers to easily recognize the
health benefit of a food
Claims about the treatment or mitigation
of a health-related disease or condition,
or about restoring, correcting or
modifying body functions;
Include a dose per serving of the food and
daily dose
FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS (CANADA)
DISEASE RISK-REDUCTION CLAIMS
THERAPEUTIC CLAIMS
15. Psyllium fibre and Blood cholesterol
Lowering
Plant sterols and Blood cholesterol Lowering
Oat fibre and blood cholesterol lowering
Unsaturated fats and Blood Cholesterol
Lowering
Barley Products and Blood Cholesterol
Lowering
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (CANADA)
APPROVED THERAPEUTIC CLAIMS
17. REGULATORY FRAMEWORK: FOODS
ROLE OF THE GOVERNMENT
U.S. Food Authorities / Regulatory Bodies:
Food and Drug Administration [FDA]
• Center for Food Safety and Applied
Nutrition [CFSAN]
U.S. Department of Agriculture [USDA]
Federal Trade Commission [FTC]
19. FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS
APPROVED HEALTH CLAIMS
Soluble fiber from certain foods
and risk of Coronary Heart Disease
(21 CFR 101.81)
Plant Sterol/stanol esters
and risk of Coronary Heart Disease
(21 CFR 101.83)
Soy Protein
and risk of Coronary Heart Disease
(21 CFR 101.82)
20. HEALTH
CLAIMS
Nutrition Labelling & Education Act
[NLEA]
Authorized Health Claims
(1990 )
Food and Drug Administration
Modernization Act
[FDAMA]
Authorized Health Claims
(1997)
Qualified Health Claims
(2003)
FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS
HEALTH CLAIMS
21. FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS
NLEA AUTHORIZED HEALTH CLAIMS
The SSA Standard :
The Continuum of Scientific Discovery
• Confidence must exist in the validity of the substance-
disease relationship;
• Consensus between qualified experts that the claim is true
and valid;
• It should be unlikely that future studies or new data will
oppose the relationship;
• Overall, there needs to be a body of consistent, relevant
evidence.
Emerging
Evidence
Consensus
22. FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS
FDAMA AUTHORIZED HEALTH CLAIMS
• Health claims based on current, published,
authoritative statements from a credible
scientific body of the U.S.A ;
• Scientific evidence for the claim is considered
to have met the SSA standard;
• Submission of claim at least 120 days prior to
first use in interstate commerce; FDA will
review and notify the petitioner of the
outcome of compliance ruling.
23. FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS
QUALIFIED HEALTH CLAIMS
Based on FDA guidance documents (not legislation);
Claims are based on emerging science;
Evidence is not well-established;
The SSA standard cannot be met; therefore the FDA
cannot issue an authorizing regulation. Instead a
“letter of enforcement” or “letter of denial” is issued.
Qualifying language is used to illustrate the level of
scientific support
25. REGULATORY FRAMEWORK: FOODS (EU)
ROLE OF THE GOVERNMENT
EUROPEAN
COMMISSION
EUROPEAN
PARLIAMENT
EU
MEMBER STATES
EUROPEAN FOOD SAFETY
AUTHORITY (EFSA)
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
SCIENTIFIC EVALUATION
OF REGULATED PRODUCTS
DIRECTORATE
APPLICATIONS DESK FEED
PESTICIDES NUTRITION
GMO FOOD INGREDIENTS & PACKAGING
27. • When consideration a food health claim
evaluation, EFSA will consider:
If the food and/or food constituent is
defined and characterized;
If the claimed effect is defined and is
a beneficial physiological effect;
If a cause and effect relationship is
established between the
consumption of the food/constituent
and the claimed effect
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (EU)
EVALUATION OF CLAIMS (EFSA)
28. • The food or substance must be sufficiently
characterized in relation to the claimed
effect (compared to reference food)
• Replacement Effect: evidence which
demonstrates the ‘replacement’ food (ie/
sweetener) has no effect on postprandial [PP]
glucose or insulin as compared to the
reference food (which would blood glucose)
• Independent or Comparative Effect: evidence
to demonstrate a significant in PPG, and a
significant in insulin or no change in insulin
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (EU)
EVIDENCE REQUIREMENTS (PPG)
29. DIETARY FIBRE
“Consumption of arabinoxylan contributes to a reduction
of the glucose rise after a meal”.
SWEETENERS
“Consumption of foods/drinks containing xylitol instead
of sugar induces a lower blood glucose rise after meals
compared to sugar-containing foods/drinks”.
FRUCTOSE
“Consumption of fructose leads to a lower blood glucose
rise than consumption of sucrose or glucose”
FOOD HEALTH CLAIMS
APPROVED GENERAL FUNCTION CLAIMS
31. NUTRITION
CONTENT
CLAIMS
PART 3 DIVISION 1
SCHEDULE 1
HEALTH
CLAIMS
HIGH LEVEL
HEALTH CLAIMS
PART 3 DIVISION 2
SCHEDULE 2
GENERAL LEVEL
HEALTH CLAIMS
PART 3 DIVISION 2
SCHEDULE 3
PART 3 DIVISION 2
SELF-
SUBSTANTIATED
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (A&NZ)
FOOD HEALTH CLAIM CATEGORIES
32. General claims:
• The food meets the Nutrient Profiling Scoring Criterion,
unless the food is standardized by Part 2.9 of the Code;
and
• The claim or the nutrition information panel under
Standard 1.2.8 includes the numerical value of the
Glycemic Index of the food
Specific claims:
• LOW: Glycemic Index ≤ 55
• MEDIUM: Glycemic Index of 56-69
• HIGH: Glycemic Index ≥ 70
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (A&NZ)
GLYCEMIC INDEX CLAIMS
33. General claims:
• The food meets the Nutrient Profiling
Scoring Criterion, unless the food is a
food standardized by Part 2.9 of the
Code
• Descriptors of ‘low’, ‘medium’, and
‘high’ cannot be used in relation to
Glycemic Load claims, however,
numbers of the measure can be used,
e.g. Glycemic Load =30
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (A&NZ)
GLYCEMIC LOAD CLAIMS
34.
35. JURISDICTION
NUTRIENT
CLAIMS
HEALTH CLAIMS
GENERAL LEVEL CLAIMS HIGH LEVEL CLAIM
CANADA
Nutrient
Content Claims
General Health Claims
Function Claims
Therapeutic Claims
Disease Risk Reduction Claims
USA
Nutrient
Content Claims
Structure/Function Claims
SSA Health Claims
Qualified Health Claims
EUROPE
Nutrition
Claims
General Function Claims Disease Risk Reduction Claims
AUSTRALIA
NEW ZEALAND
Nutrition Content
Claims
General Level Health Claims High Level Health Claims
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK (SUMMARY)
FOOD HEALTH CLAIM CATEGORIES