Author of the article:
The Associated Press
Matthew Perrone
Published Jan 16, 2025 • 2 minute read
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal health officials on Thursday backed the public health benefits of nicotine pouches, authorizing Philip Morris International’s Zyn to help adult smokers cut back or quit cigarettes.
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The Food and Drug Administration OK’d 10 Zyn flavors, including coffee, mint and menthol. It’s the first time regulators have authorized sales of a nicotine pouch product, which are the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. tobacco market.
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The pouches have been available for more than a decade as FDA reviewed company data intended to show the products can serve as an alternative to cigarettes and other traditional tobacco products. The decision doesn’t mean that Zyn is safe, just less harmful than older alternatives.
To win FDA authorization, companies generally must show that their products will reduce disease among adult tobacco users without attracting underage use by teens and adolescents.
FDA officials said Thursday that Zyn contains fewer harmful ingredients than cigarettes and various types of chewing tobacco, including snuff, which are linked to cancer and other life-threatening diseases. Additionally regulators said company data showed “a substantial portion of adults” who previously smoked switched completely to Zyn.
“In this case, the data show that these nicotine pouch products meet that bar by benefiting adults who use cigarettes or smokeless tobacco products,” said Matthew Farrelly of FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products.
The FDA previously granted similar authorization to several brands of e-cigarettes, a tobacco-heating device, and snus, a type of pasteurized tobacco that is popular in Scandinavian counties. Unlike snus, Zyn and other nicotine pouches don’t contain tobacco, only nicotine and flavoring.
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For decades, tobacco companies have tried to develop alternative products to replace dwindling sales of cigarettes, as smoking levels in the U.S. and worldwide continue to fall. E-cigarettes became popular more than a decade ago, but faced a backlash after they triggered a multiyear spike in underage vaping.
In recent months, antismoking groups have warned that nicotine pouches could follow a similar path, pointing to videos of young people popping Zyn and other pouches that have racked up millions of views on social media platforms.
But the FDA pointed to government survey data showing fewer than 2 percent of American high school and middle school students used nicotine pouches last year.
Supporters of the pouches have pointed out that Zyn works the same way as nicotine gum, lozenges and other older smoking-cessation products: releasing low levels of nicotine that are absorbed into the gums, reducing cravings.
Zyn is marketed in the U.S. by Swedish Match, a unit of Philip Morris. It competes with similar products from other tobacco competitors, including Altria’s On pouches.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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