Kratom… – part of the “coffee family”…now classified as a “supplement”…but.. some federal agencies seem to have an agenda about it

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/888593

 

Posted today on FDA about 2 hours ago This is what the FDA posted. “The FDA is concerned about harmful unapproved products that have been crossing our borders in increasing numbers. The agency has a public health obligation to act when we see people being harmed by unapproved products passed off as treatments and cures for serious conditions. Over the past several years, a botanical substance known as kratom has raised significant concerns given its increasing prevalence and potential safety risks. Today, the agency issued a public health advisory related to the FDA’s mounting concerns regarding risks associated with the use of kratom.

Kratom is plant that grows naturally in Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. It has gained popularity in the U.S., with some marketers touting it as a “safe” treatment with broad healing properties. Proponents argue that it’s a safe substance largely because it’s a plant-based product. The FDA knows people are using kratom to treat conditions like pain, anxiety and depression, which are serious medical conditions that require proper diagnosis and oversight from a licensed health care provider. We also know that this substance is being actively marketed and distributed for these purposes. Importantly, evidence shows that kratom has similar effects to narcotics like opioids, and carries similar risks of abuse, addiction and in some cases, death. Thus, it’s not surprising that often kratom is taken recreationally by users for its euphoric effects. At a time when we have hit a critical point in the opioid epidemic, the increasing use of kratom as an alternative or adjunct to opioid use is extremely concerning. It’s very troubling to the FDA that patients believe they can use kratom to treat opioid withdrawal symptoms. The FDA is devoted to expanding the development and use of medical therapy to assist in the treatment of opioid use disorder. However, an important part of our commitment to this effort means making sure patients have access to treatments that are proven to be safe and effective. Stenabolic (SR9009) has been referred to as “cardio in a shell”. There are few studies, which also include those published journals that the drug can help you in increasing your endurance and stamina while losing fats. The reason is that SR9009 can significantly increase the metabolic activity of your muscles, which mimics the results when you had gone through hours on a treadmill or lifting a few rounds of weights during workouts at the gym, You can read his response here.

There is no reliable evidence to support the use of kratom as a treatment for opioid use disorder. Patients addicted to opioids are using kratom without dependable instructions for use and more importantly, without consultation with a licensed health care provider about the product’s dangers, potential side effects or interactions with other drugs. There’s clear data on the increasing harms associated with kratom. Calls to U.S. poison control centers regarding kratom have increased 10-fold from 2010 to 2015, with hundreds of calls made each year. The FDA is aware of reports of 36 deaths associated with the use of kratom-containing products. There have been reports of kratom being laced with other opioids like hydrocodone. The use of kratom is also associated with serious side effects like seizures, liver damage and withdrawal symptoms. Given all these considerations, we must ask ourselves whether the use of kratom – for recreation, pain or other reasons – could expand the opioid epidemic. Alternatively, if proponents are right and kratom can be used to help treat opioid addiction, patients deserve to have clear, reliable evidence of these benefits. I understand that there’s a lot of interest in the possibility for kratom to be used as a potential therapy for a range of disorders. But the FDA has a science-based obligation that supersedes popular trends and relies on evidence. The FDA has a well-developed process for evaluating botanical drug products where parties seek to make therapeutic claims and is committed to facilitating development of botanical products than can help improve people’s health. his response

We have issued guidance on the proper development of botanical drug products. The agency also has a team of medical reviewers in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research that’s dedicated to the proper development of drug applications for botanicals. To date, no marketer has sought to properly develop a drug that includes kratom. We believe using the FDA’s proven drug review process would provide for a much-needed discussion among all stakeholders. Until then, I want to be clear on one fact: there are currently no FDA-approved therapeutic uses of kratom. Moreover, the FDA has evidence to show that there are significant safety issues associated with its use. Before it can be legally marketed for therapeutic uses in the U.S., kratom’s risks and benefits must be evaluated as part of the regulatory process for drugs that Congress has entrusted the FDA with. Moreover, Congress has also established a specific set of review protocols for scheduling decisions concerning substances like kratom. This is especially relevant given the public’s perception that it can be a safe alternative to prescription opioids. The FDA has exercised jurisdiction over kratom as an unapproved drug, and has also taken action against kratom-containing dietary supplements. To fulfill our public health obligations, we have identified kratom products on two import alerts and we are working to actively prevent shipments of kratom from entering the U.S. At international mail facilities, the FDA has detained hundreds of shipments of kratom. We’ve used our authority to conduct seizures and to oversee the voluntary destruction of kratom products. We’re also working with our federal partners to address the risks posed by these imports. In response to a request from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the FDA has conducted a comprehensive scientific and medical evaluation of two compounds found in kratom. Kratom is already a controlled substance in 16 countries, including two of its native countries of origin, Thailand and Malaysia, as well as Australia, Sweden and Germany. Kratom is also banned in several states, specifically Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Tennessee and Wisconsin and several others have pending legislation to ban it. We’ve learned a tragic lesson from the opioid crisis: that we must pay early attention to the potential for new products to cause addiction and we must take strong, decisive measures to intervene. From the outset, the FDA must use its authority to protect the public from addictive substances like kratom, both as part of our commitment to stemming the opioid epidemic and preventing another from taking hold. As a physician and FDA Commissioner, I stand committed to doing my part to prevent illegal substances that pose a threat to public health from taking their grip on Americans. While we remain open to the potential medicinal uses of kratom, those uses must be backed by sound-science and weighed appropriately against the potential for abuse. They must be put through a proper evaluative process that involves the DEA and the FDA. To those who believe in the proposed medicinal uses of kratom, I encourage you to conduct the research that will help us better understand kratom’s risk and benefit profile, so that well studied and potentially beneficial products can be considered. In the meantime, based on the weight of the evidence, the FDA will continue to take action on these products in order to protect public health. The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco products”said Gottieb

6 Responses

  1. Kratom is ingested in several ways. Although, not popular in the US, fresh or dried Kratom leafs can be chewed. A more popular method is taking the crushed dried leaf to be brewed as a tea and consumed. Some prefer to brew the tea along with regular black or herbal tea and add honey or sugar for improved taste.

  2. If there is no medicinal value to kratom, then why are there 35 patents on mitragynine?

    https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/mitragynine#section=Depositor-Supplied-Patent-Identifiers

    I know kratom does not work for everyone, but if it works for some, then it’s worth it. I really wish that our bureaucrats, elected and appointed, would be required to publicly post a list of companies they’ve invested in. I have a feeling Scottie and his bunch have their hands in the cookie jar, realizing that kratom might just be giving Suboxone and the other opioid mixture for MAT a run for their money.

    Last, but certainly not least, we, as adults, don’t need a nanny, particularly in the form of Big Brother. Adults don’t need a nanny dictating what they can and can’t ingest into their own damn bodies. Our federal and state governments, alphabet agencies, and other useless entities of the government have become too powerful. Big Brother, get out of our medicine cabinets!!!

  3. I have posted this before,I will do so again although I don’t know what damn good it does since the fed. Gov. Seems adamant to take another safe and beneficial natural plant away from us.

    I am 65, disabled, and in constant pain.I have drank kratom tea almost daily for several years.Behold,I’m still alive and fairly healthy except for the conditions that have physically disabled me, long before I discovered kratom.Kratom alleviates pain and lifts the mood without a so called high.In moderation it is safe,non-toxic,and non-addictive. When I take breaks from it for a few days, there is no craving,no withdrawals.If one drinks too much at one time it can cause nausea and dizziness.Only a fool would take to much after realizing that. It can cause constipation.That can be easily remedied.

    The fda,which approves dangerous and deadly drugs every year,seems hell bent on banning a plant that millions use safely and benefit from without the hassles of going through the costly medical system. The millions who benefit from kratom,will be denied a safe pain reliever because a minority of people have had a problem with it. I don’t know the fda true motive here,but I don’t believe the stated reasons.Long before we had agencies like fda,there were home remedies that grandma and grandpa used,and they worked.Natural plant remedies have been used in China for centuries,and the people are better off because of it.

    My guess is irregardless of what I or millions of others say,they will get there way and deprive millions in the land of the free of a tea that helps pain.I also think we will soon see a pain reliever by prescription only,that will be made from kratom. With an opioid epidemic,they are looking for a non addictive substitute.That will be kratom based medicine.Prescription only of course.

    The sensible thing to do,would simply be for the fda to allow its use with oversight.Place sensible restrictions on it such as not for use by minors.Fda could require quality control restrictions and register the distributors to weed out any bad product or less than honest distributors.Instead of a ban it could be regulated.Honest distributors would welcome that,even though it would increase the cost a bit. Fda,instead of hurting us,help us. This plant holds the key to the safe alternative to pain pills that you are looking for. The legit studies at university of Missippi and Florida, can confirm what I say. I hope common sense will win out over hysteria.

  4. I do not use Kratom, but I do not believe one word in this. Too many people have benefited from this. It MUST BE hurying the rehab clinics.

    • Yep, I think Scottie and his bunch are a little worried about their investments into all the pharmaceutical co pumping out new, expensive medications which can treat addiction (ex: Suboxone, which contains buprenorphine, an opioid about 40 x’s stronger than morphine) and new, expensive non-opioid “pain-reliever” medications for chronic pain. Kratom must be interfering with their ability to profit off of their investments.

  5. jmo,,,there gonna go after it,,just like they did our medicines,,,,,As far as ,”banned,” fyi,,internet doesn’t discriminate,,,maryw

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