FDA Warns Companies Selling CBD and Delta-8 THC Products
/By Pat Anson, PNN Editor
When Congress passed the 2018 Farm Bill and legalized hemp under federal law, the goal was to make it possible for U.S. farmers to grow hemp again as a cash crop for making everything from clothing and fuel to shampoo and horse feed. “Rope, not dope,” was the slogan used by the bill’s supporters, who pointed out that hemp contains less than 0.3% tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana.
No one could possibly get high on hemp, could they?
It didn’t take long for the cannabis industry to figure out how. Many companies now make cannabidiol (CBD) products from hemp and tweak their chemical composition just enough to produce the euphoria that some consumers seek. A recent study by CBD Oracle found that some hemp-based edibles have 360% more THC than those sold in cannabis dispensaries. Over half the edibles they tested were mislabeled.
The Food and Drug Administration has been slow to regulate CBD products or confront mislabeling, but today the agency finally took action by sending the first warning letters to cannabis companies for selling products containing delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-8 THC), which the agency considers an unapproved drug.
Delta-8 THC is one of over 100 cannabinoids found in marijuana, but is not present in significant amounts in hemp. However, some companies have found ways to concentrate delta-8 THC from hemp-derived CBD to give users a mild psychoactive and intoxicating effect.
Edibles containing delta-8-THC are being sold as candy, cookies, breakfast cereal, chocolate, gummies, tinctures and beverages. Because they are made from hemp, they can legally be purchased without an ID or marijuana prescription – even in states where medical or recreational marijuana is illegal.
"The FDA is very concerned about the growing popularity of delta-8 THC products being sold online and in stores nationwide. These products often include claims that they treat or alleviate the side effects related to a wide variety of diseases or medical disorders, such as cancer, multiple sclerosis, chronic pain, nausea and anxiety," FDA Principal Deputy Commissioner Janet Woodcock, MD, said in a statement. "It is extremely troubling that some of the food products are packaged and labeled in ways that may appeal to children.”
In the last two years, the FDA says it has received 104 reports of adverse events involving delta-8 THC, most of them involving edibles. National poison control centers have reported over 2,300 cases involving delta-8 THC products, including one death involving a child.
The FDA has previously warned companies about making unsubstantiated medical claims about CBD products, but these are the first warnings to target delta-8 THC specifically. The five companies that received the letters -- ATLRx, BioMD Plus, Delta 8 Hemp, Kingdom Harvest and M Six Labs make only vague medical claims on their websites, telling consumers about “dosing Delta-8 THC for optimal effects” and how their products help “alleviate stress, anxiety, and uneasiness.”
Curiously, some of the companies also sell CBD products made with delta-9 THC – a more potent cannabinoid that can be derived from hemp – which the FDA ignored in its warning, even though delta-9 is also an unapproved drug. The agency’s warning letters also say nothing about mislabeling. Simply having delta-8 in a product — at any dose — is considered illegal.
The cannabis industry is still coming to terms with all of this and how hemp legalization is having unintended consequences.
“We honestly never thought intoxicating products would be produced from hemp when we were advocating for legalization,” Erica Stark of the National Hemp Association told CBD Oracle. “Now the FDA needs to figure out how to regulate the industry.”
Will Congress amend federal law to protect consumers and regulate how hemp is utilized? A bill under consideration would raise THC levels even higher.
Under the proposed Hemp Advancement Act of 2022, which is supported by the hemp industry, the legal THC threshold for hemp products would be raised from 0.3 percent to 1 percent. Participation in the hemp industry would also be expanded to include people with prior drug convictions.