Codex meeting breaks ground on upper safe levels

Related tags Dietary supplement Nutrition

The Codex committee charged with supplements and foods for special
uses has agreed to abolish the 100 per cent RDA measure for setting
maximum levels of vitamins and minerals, as proposed in a draft
guideline.

The Codex committee charged with supplements and foods for special uses has agreed to abolish the 100 per cent RDA measure for setting maximum levels of vitamins and minerals, as proposed in a draft guideline.

How to establish maximum levels of ingredients in supplements has been hotly debated by the dietary supplements industry for years. Determining levels by RDA, or Recommended Daily Allowance, has seen strong opposition from several parties who claim that this can restrict a consumer's intake to almost ineffective levels.

The RDA measure had been included under article 3.2.2 of the 'proposed draft guidelines for vitamin and mineral food supplements', established at previous Codex meetings. The Codex Alimentarius​, set up in the 1960s by the World Trade Organisation and UN, determines food standards for global trading partners. It therefore plays a key role in determining the shape and direction of much future national, regional and international regulation affecting dietary supplements.

The decision to delete RDA as a measure for vitamin levels represents a significant victory for those supporting alternative references for supplement levels, notably the use of risk assessment and upper safe levels.

Codex guidelines had specified as a first option for vitamin and mineral levels that 'the maximum level of each vitamin and/or mineral contained in a vitamin and mineral supplement per daily portion of consumption as suggested by the manufacturer should not exceed [100 per cent] of the recommended daily intake as determined by FAO/WHO'.

Some support for this recommendation came from Norway, Malaysia and Thailand, however a majority of countries and non-governmental organisations were in favour of its deletion and chairman Rolf Grossklaus decided to remove the option from the draft. The decision broke an eight-year stalemate and moved the standard for vitamin and mineral supplements from step 3 to the pivotal step 5 in the Codex's eight-step food standard-setting process.

The second option on maximum levels suggested that limits be guided by upper safe levels established by generally accepted scientific data and daily intake of vitamins and minerals from other dietary sources.

A final sentence referring to the need to take into accountreference intake values of vitamins and minerals for the population concerned has however been left in the text for this guideline, despite resistance from several members of the committee. It has been included in brackets after the second option, which becomes the only accepted guideline on this issue.

The article now states that maximum amounts of vitamins and minerals in supplements per daily portion of consumption shall be set according to (a) upper safe levels of vitamins and minerals established by scientific risk assessment based on generally accepted scientific data, taking into consideration, as appropriate, the varying degrees of sensitivity of different consumer groups; and (b) the daily intake of vitamins and minerals from other dietary sources.

Simon Pettman, executive director of the IADSA, said the move was 'proof' that risk assessment is the basis for calculating maximum levels of vitamins and minerals, as the RDA now has no basis in Codex texts.

The Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN), which has pushed for a change to the guidelines' language for years, also welcomed the move.

"Today's result is a vindication of the efforts of so many who have worked to preserve scientific integrity as the cornerstone of the international standard-setting process,"​ said CRN's John Hathcock, vice president of scientific and international affairs.

The association's International Trade and Market Development Committee chairman Mark A. Le Doux added that the result the decision "represents the single most important development in the ongoing effort to open the world's markets to safe, healthy products".

Both men singled out for particular praise the US and European Commission delegations for their leadership and willingness to compromise at key junctures in the negotiations.

The committee continues its discussion on the supplement guidelines, and other proposals including those on health claims and infant foods, for the rest of this week in Bonn, Germany.

Related topics Regulation

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