(Full SE) Reports Demonstrating Substantial Equivalence for Tobacco Products (Sections 905(j) and 910(a))

Reports Intended to Demonstrate the Substantial Equivalence of a New Tobacco Product

Section 905j Reports Demo Substantial Equivalence Guidance Document

(Full SE) Reports Demonstrating Substantial Equivalence for Tobacco Products (Sections 905(j) and 910(a))

OMB: 0910-0673

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Guidance for Industry
and FDA Staff
Section 905(j) Reports:
Demonstrating Substantial
Equivalence for Tobacco Products
Document issued on January 5, 2011.
For questions regarding this guidance, contact the Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) at 1-877CTP-1373.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration
Center for Tobacco Products
OMB Control No. 0910-0673
Expiration Date: 07/31/2014
See additional PRA statement in Section VII of this guidance.

Contains Nonbinding Recommendations

Preface
Public Comment
This guidance document is being implemented immediately without prior public comment under
§ 10.115(g)(2) because the agency has determined that prior public participation is not feasible
or appropriate, as interested parties need clarity as to FDA’s expectations regarding 905(j)
reports and sufficient time to prepare submissions in advance of the statutory deadline. Written
comments and suggestions may be submitted at any time for Agency consideration to the
Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers
Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852. Alternatively, electronic comments may be submitted to
http://www.regulations.gov. All comments should be identified with the docket number listed in
the notice of availability that publishes in the Federal Register. FDA will review any comments
we receive and revise the guidance document when appropriate.

Additional Copies
Additional copies are available from the Internet at http://www.fda.gov/TobaccoProducts. You
may also send an e-mail request to [email protected] to receive an electronic copy
of the guidance.

Contains Nonbinding Recommendations

Table of Contents
I.

Introduction..............................................................................................................................1

II.

Background ..............................................................................................................................2

III. Definitions................................................................................................................................3
A.

Substantially equivalent or substantial equivalence ............................................................3

B.

Characteristics......................................................................................................................3

C.

Tobacco Product ..................................................................................................................3

D.

New Tobacco Product..........................................................................................................4

E.

Predicate Tobacco Product ..................................................................................................4

IV. General/Administrative Information........................................................................................5
A.

Who may submit a report under section 905(j)?..................................................................5

B.

When should a 905(j) report be submitted? .........................................................................5

C.

How should the 905(j) report be submitted to FDA? ..........................................................6

D.

How will FDA review the 905(j) report?.............................................................................6

E.

How should a request for an exemption under section 905(j)(3) be submitted? .................7

V.

Content/Data to Submit............................................................................................................7
A.

For All 905(j) Reports..........................................................................................................8

1. Cover Letter .....................................................................................................................8
2. Summary Section .............................................................................................................8
3. Listing of Design Features ...............................................................................................9
4. Listing of Ingredients .......................................................................................................9
5. Listing of Materials........................................................................................................10
6. Description of Heating Source.......................................................................................10
7. Description of Composition ...........................................................................................10
8. Other Features ................................................................................................................11
9. Relationship to Section 910(a)(4) Requirement Regarding Health Information
Summary or Statement...........................................................................................................12
B. Additional Data ..................................................................................................................12
C.

Additional Considerations .................................................................................................13

VI. Confidentiality .......................................................................................................................13
VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.........................................................................................14

Contains Nonbinding Recommendations

Guidance for Industry and FDA Staff

Section 905(j) Reports:
Demonstrating Substantial
Equivalence for Tobacco
Products
This guidance represents the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) current
thinking on this topic. It does not create or confer any rights for or on any person and
does not operate to bind FDA or the public. You can use an alternative approach if the
approach satisfies the requirements of the applicable statutes and regulations. If you
want to discuss an alternative approach, contact the FDA staff responsible for
implementing this guidance. If you cannot identify the appropriate FDA staff, call the
appropriate number listed on the title page of this guidance.

I. Introduction
This guidance provides recommendations and information related to the submission and
review of reports under section 905(j) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(Act), as amended by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (Tobacco
Control Act) (Public Law 111-31). Section 905(j) authorizes FDA to establish the form
for the submission of information related to substantial equivalence (21 USC 387e(j)). In
the future, FDA intends to initiate a rulemaking that would establish requirements and
standards for substantial equivalence under sections 905(j) and 910 of the Act (the
provisions relating to reports intended to demonstrate substantial equivalence). This
guidance is intended to assist persons submitting reports under section 905(j) of the Act.
It explains, among other things, FDA’s interpretation of the statutory sections related to
substantial equivalence, and provides recommendations on the form and content of
section 905(j) reports. This guidance also provides information on FDA’s review of
905(j) reports.
The guidance discusses premarket statutory requirements that include certain submissions
to be made to FDA no later than March 22, 2011. This guidance document is being

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implemented immediately without prior public comment under § 10.115(g)(2) because
the agency has determined that prior public participation is not feasible or appropriate, as
interested parties need clarity as to FDA’s expectations regarding 905(j) reports and
sufficient time to prepare submissions in advance of the statutory deadline. You may
submit written comments to FDA on this guidance at any time for Agency consideration;
in addition, we request that you submit any comments regarding any significant oversight
in this guidance within 30 days of the issuance of this guidance (refer to the title page for
the issue date).
For 905(j) reports for tobacco products first marketed between February 15, 2007 and
March 22, 2011 (many of which are from small manufacturers) that are submitted prior to
March 23, 2011, FDA intends to allow manufacturers who have acted diligently in
preparing their submissions a reasonable amount of time to supplement their initial
submissions, provided these manufacturers submit a 905(j) report by the statutory
deadline. FDA intends to determine what constitutes a reasonable period of time on a
case by case basis.
FDA’s guidance documents, including this guidance, do not establish legally enforceable
responsibilities. Instead, guidances describe the Agency’s current thinking on a topic and
should be viewed only as recommendations, unless specific regulatory or statutory
requirements are cited. The use of the word should in Agency guidances means that
something is suggested or recommended, but not required.

II. Background
In general, a tobacco product manufacturer must obtain an order under section
910(c)(1)(A)(i) (order after review of a premarket application) before the manufacturer
may introduce a new tobacco product (see definition in Section III below) into interstate
commerce (section 910 of the Act; 21 USC 387j). An order under section 910(c)(1)(A)(i)
is not required, however, if a manufacturer submits a report under section 905(j) for the
new tobacco product and FDA issues an order finding that the tobacco product is (1)
substantially equivalent to a tobacco product commercially marketed in the United States
as of February 15, 2007, and (2) in compliance with the requirements of the Act. 1
The following sections provide information about FDA’s interpretation of the statutory
provisions relating to substantial equivalence, as well as recommendations on how to
submit a 905(j) report and the information that should be submitted. The guidance also
provides information related to FDA’s review of the 905(j) report and supporting
information.

1

An order under 910(c)(1)(A)(i) is also not required for a new tobacco product if the tobacco product is
exempt from the requirements of section 905(j) pursuant to a regulation issued under section 905(j)(3).

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III. Definitions
This section provides the definitions of certain terms used in this guidance.

A. Substantially equivalent or substantial equivalence
Substantially equivalent or substantial equivalence is defined at section 910(a)(3)(A) of
the Act. The Act provides:
In this section and section 905(j), the term “substantially equivalent” or
“substantial equivalence” means, with respect to the tobacco product being
compared to the predicate tobacco product, that the Secretary by order has found
that the tobacco product—
(i) has the same characteristics as the predicate tobacco product; or
(ii) has different characteristics and the information submitted contains
information, including clinical data if deemed necessary by the Secretary, that
demonstrates that it is not appropriate to regulate the product under [section 910
of the Act] because the product does not raise different questions of public health.
A tobacco product may not be found to be substantially equivalent to a predicate tobacco
product that has been removed from the market at the initiative of the FDA or that has
been determined by a judicial order to be misbranded or adulterated (section 910(a)(3)(C)
of the Act).

B. Characteristics
Characteristics, as used in the definition of substantial equivalence, is defined at section
910(a)(3)(B) as “the materials, ingredients, design, composition, heating source, or other
features of a tobacco product.”

C. Tobacco Product
Tobacco product means “any product made or derived from tobacco that is intended for
human consumption, including any component, part, or accessory of a tobacco product
(except for raw materials other than tobacco used in manufacturing a component, part, or
accessory of a tobacco product)” (section 201(rr)(1) of the Act. Thus, the term is not
limited to products containing tobacco, but also includes components, parts, or
accessories of tobacco products, whether they are sold for further manufacturing or for
consumer use. For example, tobacco, papers, and filters are tobacco products, whether
they are sold to consumers for use with roll-your-own tobacco or are sold for further
manufacturing into a product sold to a consumer, such as a cigarette. This term does not
include an article that is a drug, a device, or a combination product as defined in the
FD&C Act (section 201(rr)(2) of the FD&C Act (21 USC 321(rr)(2)).

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D. New Tobacco Product
A new tobacco product is defined at section 910(a)(1) as “any tobacco product (including
those products in test markets) that was not commercially marketed in the United States
as of February 15, 2007; or any modification (including a change in design, any
component, any part, or any constituent, including a smoke constituent, or in the content,
delivery or form of nicotine, or any other additive or ingredient) of a tobacco product
where the modified product was commercially marketed in the United States after
February 15, 2007.” At this time, FDA does not intend to enforce the requirements of
sections 910 and 905(j) for tobacco blending changes required to address the natural
variation of tobacco (e.g., blending changes due to variation in growing conditions) in
order to maintain a consistent product. Blending changes that are intended to alter the
chemical or perception properties of the new product (e.g., nicotine level, pH,
smoothness, harshness, etc.) compared to the predicate should be reported under 910 or
905(j). If you have any questions regarding whether a specific blending change you
have made will be subject to the requirements of sections 910 and 905(j), please contact
us.

E. Predicate Tobacco Product
A tobacco product manufacturer must show that a new tobacco product is “substantially
equivalent, within the meaning of section 910, to a tobacco product commercially
marketed (other than for test marketing) in the United States as of February 15, 2007, or
to a tobacco product that the Secretary has previously determined, pursuant to subsection
(a)(3) of section 910, is substantially equivalent and that is in compliance with the
requirements of this Act.” (Section 905(j)(1)(A)(i) of the Act.) The comparison product
chosen by the tobacco product manufacturer is referred to by FDA as the predicate
tobacco product.
For the purposes of this guidance document, FDA refers to predicate tobacco products
that were commercially marketed (other than for test marketing) in the United States as of
February 15, 2007 as “grandfathered tobacco products.”
For the purposes of 905(j) reports, the new tobacco product is compared to a predicate
tobacco product in determining substantial equivalence (section 910(a)(3)(A) of the Act).
FDA interprets this to mean that a single predicate tobacco product should be used for
comparison purposes, as FDA believes that a meaningful scientific comparison intended
to determine whether the characteristics of the products are the same or are different but
present no different questions of public health cannot be made between a new tobacco
product and multiple predicate products.

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IV. General/Administrative Information
A. Who may submit a report under section 905(j)?
As a general matter, before a new tobacco product may be commercially marketed, an
application for review must be submitted under section 910, and FDA must issue an order
permitting the product to be marketed (section 910(c)(1)(A)(i)). However, section 910
provides that you (a manufacturer of a new tobacco product) are not required to obtain an
order under section 910 if you have submitted a report under section 905(j) and FDA has
issued an order finding the tobacco product to be substantially equivalent to an
appropriate predicate product and in compliance with the requirements of the Act. If
FDA is not able to make both of these findings, you must submit an application and
receive an order pursuant to section 910 in order to commercially market a new tobacco
product. However, manufacturers of tobacco products first introduced or delivered for
introduction into interstate commerce for commercial distribution after February 15,
2007, and prior to March 22, 2011, who submit a report prior to March 23, 2011, may
continue to market the tobacco product unless FDA issues an order that the tobacco
product is not substantially equivalent (section 910(a)(2)(B) of the Act).
At this time, however, FDA intends to limit its enforcement of the requirements of
Section 910 and 905(j) to finished, regulated tobacco products. These finished, regulated
tobacco products include the products named in section 901(b) (i.e. cigarettes, smokeless
tobacco and roll-your-own tobacco) and tobacco products deemed by regulation to be
regulated under chapter IX, as well as the component parts of regulated tobacco products
sold or distributed for consumer use, (e.g., cigarette rolling papers, filters, or filter tubes
sold separately to consumers or as part of kits). To avoid the submission of duplicative
information, FDA does not at this time intend to enforce the requirements of 910 and
905(j) for components of regulated tobacco products that are sold or distributed solely for
further manufacturing into finished tobacco products. We anticipate receiving all
relevant information regarding such new tobacco products in the 905(j) reports of the
finished regulated tobacco products. It is therefore the finished product manufacturer’s
responsibility to ensure it has accurate information regarding the components included in
its product. The manufacturer must obtain appropriate market authorization for any
changes to a tobacco product, including modifications to components. For example, if a
finished cigarette manufacturer’s filter supplier changed the conformation of its filters, or
changed the ingredients in its filters, the finished cigarette manufacturer would be
responsible for including this change as part of its submission of its new product
application.

B. When should a 905(j) report be submitted?
Section 905(j)(1) of the Act requires that you submit a 905(j) report at least 90 days
before introducing or delivering for introduction into interstate commerce for commercial
distribution, a tobacco product intended for human use that was not commercially
marketed in the United States as of February 15, 2007.
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Contains Nonbinding Recommendations

Manufacturers of tobacco products first introduced or delivered for introduction into
interstate commerce for commercial distribution after February 15, 2007, and prior to
March 22, 2011, must submit the report no later than March 22, 2011, or your product
will be deemed to be both misbranded and adulterated (sections 902(6)(A) and 903(a)(6)
of the Act; 21 U.S.C. 387b(6)(A), 387c(a)(6)). If a 905(j) report is submitted prior to
March 23, 2011, the tobacco product may continue to be marketed unless and until FDA
issues an order that the tobacco product is not substantially equivalent to the predicate
tobacco product (section 910(a)(2)(B) of the Act). FDA understands that 905(j) reports
for these products are due soon and that some manufacturers may not be able to submit
all the data and other information recommended in this guidance by the statutory
deadline. For 905(j) reports for this category of products that are submitted prior to
March 23, 2011, FDA intends to allow manufacturers who have acted diligently in
preparing their submissions a reasonable amount of time to supplement their initial
submissions. FDA intends to determine what constitutes a reasonable period of time on a
case by case basis.
New tobacco products first introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate
commerce on or after March 22, 2011, and products introduced between February 15,
2007, and March 22, 2011, for which a 905(j) report was not submitted before March 23,
2011, may not be marketed without an order from FDA under either section
910(c)(1)(A)(i) or 910(a)(2)(A) of the Act. If a 905(j) report is submitted for such a
product, the product may not be marketed without an order from FDA even if it has been
more than 90 days since the 905(j) report was submitted to FDA (section 910(a)(2)(A)).

C. How should the 905(j) report be submitted to FDA?
While electronic submission is not required at this time, FDA is strongly encouraging
electronic submission to facilitate efficiency and timeliness of data submission and
processing. FDA intends to provide and update information on its website on how
manufactures may provide the electronic submission to FDA (e.g., information on media
and methods of transmission).

D. How will FDA review the 905(j) report?
FDA will review the 905(j) report and supporting information consistent with the
requirements of sections 905(j) and 910 of the Act, i.e., to determine whether the new
tobacco product is substantially equivalent to the predicate tobacco product. In addition
to determining that the product is substantially equivalent, FDA must also determine that
the new tobacco product is in compliance with the requirements of the Act before issuing
an order under section 910(a)(2)(A)(i).
If you do not provide FDA with sufficient information to make these determinations, this
will affect FDA’s review. This may result in delays in review, or a finding that the new
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Contains Nonbinding Recommendations
tobacco product is not substantially equivalent to the predicate tobacco product, and/or is
not in compliance with the requirements of the Act.

E. How should a request for an exemption under section
905(j)(3) be submitted?
Under Section 910(a)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act, you are not required to obtain a market
authorization order if the manufacturer’s product is exempted from the requirements of
section 905(j) pursuant to a regulation issued under section 905(j)(3). Section 905(j)(3)
of the Act provides that FDA may exempt from the requirements relating to the
demonstration that a new tobacco product is substantially equivalent to a predicate
product, tobacco products that are modified by adding or deleting a tobacco additive, or
by increasing or decreasing the quantity of an existing tobacco additive, if FDA
determines that (1) the modification would be a minor modification of a tobacco product
that can be sold under the Act; (2) a 905(j) report demonstrating substantial equivalence
is not necessary to ensure that permitting the tobacco product to be marketed would be
appropriate for protection of the public health; and (3) an exemption is otherwise
appropriate.
FDA intends to issue a regulation as required under section 905(j)(3)(B) of the Act to
implement the exemption provisions in section 905(j)(3)(A) of the Act. If FDA
determines an exemption is appropriate, pursuant to the regulation once implemented,
you will still have to report to FDA the basis, along with supporting information, for your
determination that the tobacco product is modified as described in 905(j)(3), the
modifications are to a product that is commercially marketed and in compliance with the
requirements of the Act, and all of the modifications are covered by exemptions granted
by FDA pursuant to 905(j)(3) (section 905(j)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act).

V. Content/Data to Submit
A 905(j) report must provide sufficient information to enable FDA to determine whether
the new tobacco product is (1) substantially equivalent, within the meaning of section
910(a)(3) of the Act, to an appropriate predicate product, and (2) in compliance with the
requirements of the Act (section 910(a)(2)(A) of the Act). In addition, a 905(j) report
must include information on action taken by you to comply with the requirements under
section 907 of the Act that are applicable to the tobacco product (section 905(j)(1)(B) of
the Act). In the following sections, FDA provides recommendations on the information it
believes a typical 905(j) report may need to include in order to demonstrate substantial
equivalence. Manufacturers seeking to demonstrate substantial equivalence may also
contact FDA to seek the agency’s input on the specific types of information that the
agency believes will be necessary to support the manufacturer’s 905(j) report. In addition,
after reviewing a 905(j) report, FDA may request additional information it determines is
needed to make the required findings for a particular tobacco product.

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The 905(j) report should provide side-by-side quantitative and qualitative comparisons of
the new tobacco product with the predicate tobacco product with respect to all product
characteristics. In addition, if the predicate to which the new tobacco product is being
compared is a product for which FDA has issued an order of substantial equivalence,
FDA recommends that the 905(j) report also include a side-by-side comparison to the
grandfathered tobacco product (the tobacco product to which the predicate was
compared). If the 905(j) report is for a component, part, or accessory of a tobacco
product, FDA requests that you submit information regarding all relevant product
characteristics, as identified below, and identify those characteristics that are not relevant
to the component, part, or accessory, along with a justification for your determination.
Section 905(j)(1)(A)(i) requires that, in submitting a 905(j) report, you must show that
the new tobacco product is substantially equivalent, within the meaning of section 910, to
an appropriate predicate product. It is important, therefore, that you submit sufficient
information to enable FDA to determine whether the new tobacco product has the same
characteristics (defined as the materials, ingredients, design, composition, heating source,
or other features of a tobacco product) as the predicate tobacco product, in accordance
with 910(a)(3)(A)(i), or has different characteristics but it is not necessary to regulate the
product under section 910(c)(1)(A)(i) because it does not raise different questions of
public health, as required by 910(a)(3)(A)(ii). FDA understands this to mean that 905(j)
reports are to be organized based upon the list of characteristics as set forth in section
910(a)(3). In addition to these characteristics, for products that have different
characteristics, FDA may determine that additional information is needed to determine
whether the products raise different questions of public health.

A. For All 905(j) Reports
The following items apply to all 905(j) reports, whether for a new tobacco product with
the same characteristics as a predicate product under 910(a)(3)(A)(i) or for a new tobacco
product with different characteristics, where you believe these different characteristics do
not raise different questions of public health under 910(a)(3)(A)(ii).
1. Cover Letter
We strongly recommend that you include a cover letter that describes the data
contained in your report, the predicate product to which you claim your tobacco
product is substantially equivalent, and whether your new tobacco product has the
same characteristics as the predicate tobacco product or different characteristics
that do not raise different questions of public health. In addition your cover letter
should provide contact information and be signed by a responsible official that
either resides in or has a place of business within the United States.
2. Summary Section

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We strongly recommend that you include a summary section in your 905(j) report
that contains a brief description of the specific similarities and differences between
the new tobacco product and the predicate tobacco product and, where applicable,
the grandfathered tobacco product, with respect to: design features, ingredients,
materials, heating source, composition, and other features, including the presence
of harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHC). You may also include a
brief discussion of the basis for your determination that the new tobacco product is
substantially equivalent (SE) to the predicate tobacco product and, where
applicable, to the grandfathered tobacco product.
3. Listing of Design Features
You should list design features in a tabular format, and include, but not be limited
to, the following information in separate columns (from left to right):
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

the component of the tobacco product (e.g., tobacco filler, filter)
the subcomponent of the tobacco product (e.g., reconstituted tobacco)
the name of the design feature of the tobacco product (e.g., moisture, pH,
ventilation, ventilation hole location, paper porosity, tobacco cut width)
the unit of measure
the design feature’s specifications in the new tobacco product (with any
specification variation, if applicable)
the design feature’s specifications in the predicate tobacco product (with
any specification variation, if applicable)
the design feature’s specifications in the grandfathered tobacco product (if
applicable) (with any specification variation, if applicable).

4. Listing of Ingredients
You should list ingredients in a tabular format, and include, but not be limited to,
the following information in separate columns (from left to right):
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

the component of the tobacco product (e.g., tobacco filler, filter)
the subcomponent, if applicable (e.g., reconstituted tobacco)
ingredient name
common name(s)
Chemical Abstract Services number (for individual chemical ingredients)
the function of the ingredient
the unit of measure
the level used in the new tobacco product (with any specification
variation, if applicable)
the level used in the predicate tobacco product (with any specification
variation, if applicable)

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•

the level used in the grandfathered tobacco product (if applicable) (with
any specification variation, if applicable).

Reporting of quantitative levels should follow recommendations in the
guidance previously issued related to listing of ingredients under section
904(a)(1) of the Act
(http://www.fda.gov/TobaccoProducts/GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInfor
mation/ucm191982.htm).
5. Listing of Materials
You should list materials in a tabular format and include, but not be limited to, the
following information in separate columns (from left to right):
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

the component of the tobacco product referenced (e.g., tobacco filler,
filter)
the subcomponent, if applicable (e.g., reconstituted tobacco)
the material name
common names
material specifications (including units) for the submitted product (with
any specification variation, if applicable)
material specifications (including units) for the predicate tobacco product
(with any specification variation, if applicable)
material specifications (including units) for the grandfathered tobacco
product (with any specification variation, if applicable).

6. Description of Heating Source
The 905(j) report should provide a description of the heating source (e.g., burning
coal, electric, chemical reaction, carbon tip) used in the consumption of the
finished tobacco product. If the heating source of the new tobacco product differs
from that of the predicate tobacco product and, if applicable, from the
grandfathered tobacco product, this description should be in enough detail to
demonstrate that the change in heating source does not raise different questions of
public health.
7. Description of Composition
The 905(j) report should include an explanation of how the design, materials,
ingredients, and heating source of the product are integrated to produce the final
product. If the composition of the new tobacco product differs from that of the
predicate and, if applicable, from the grandfathered tobacco product, this
description should contain enough detail to demonstrate that the change in
composition does not raise different questions of public health.

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8. Other Features
a)

Listing of Harmful and Potentially Harmful Constituents

For all products, you should report levels of all HPHC in tabular format, with
a side-by-side comparison with the predicate tobacco product and, where
applicable, to a grandfathered tobacco product. For tobacco products that are
smoked (e.g., cigarettes), you should report quantitative levels in smoke using
both the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and Canadian
Intense smoking regimens. If an alternative to these regimens is used, you
should provide an explanation of why the alternative provides comparable
results to the ISO and Canadian Intense regimens.
FDA recommends reporting HPHC information in a tabular format using
separate columns, in the order listed below (from left to right), for each of the
following:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

the constituent name (the constituents should be listed in alphabetical
order, top-down in the table)
common name(s)
Chemical Abstract Services number
the unit of measure
the level measured for the new tobacco product (with 95% confidence
intervals)
the level measured for the predicate tobacco product (with 95%
confidence intervals)
the level measured for the grandfathered tobacco product (if applicable)
(with 95% confidence intervals)
number of replicates
method of measuring and reference(s).

FDA recommends including separate tables for results generated using the
ISO, Canadian Intense, and any other smoking machine regimens.
You should provide documentation showing that the laboratories you used to
perform analyses that provide the basis for the results you are submitting are
accredited by a nationally or internationally recognized external accreditation
organization.
You should provide documentation describing the storage conditions of both
the predicate and the new tobacco product.
b)

Other

The 905(j) report should address any additional characteristics and their
relation to the predicate product.
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9. Relationship to Section 910(a)(4) Requirement Regarding Health
Information Summary or Statement
Section 910(a)(4)(A) requires that, as part of a 905(j) submission, you include an
adequate summary of any health information related to the tobacco product or state
that such information will be made available to any person upon request (section
910(a)(4)(A) of the Act). FDA strongly recommends that you include the
summary with your 905(j) report. The summary must contain detailed information
regarding data concerning adverse health effects and will be made available to the
public by FDA within 30 days of the issuance of a determination that the new
tobacco product is substantially equivalent to another [predicate] tobacco product
(section 910(a)(4)(B) of the Act).

B. Additional Data
In addition to the information requested in Section V.A. above, for 905(j) reports for
products with different characteristics, but which you do not believe raise different
questions of public health under 910(a)(3)(A)(ii), FDA may request additional data
needed to make a substantial equivalence determination.
Examples of additional data that may be requested include:
Consumer Perception Studies - data comparing consumer perceptions with
respect to the new tobacco product and the predicate that could affect
initiation, cessation, frequency of use, patterns of use, smoking behavior, and
perceptions of harm or addictiveness.
Clinical data - data comparing the biomarkers of exposure and biomarkers of
potential harm and human toxicity of the new tobacco product as compared to
the predicate tobacco product and (if applicable) to a grandfathered tobacco
product. Your report should include a summary of all studies conducted. In
addition, your pivotal studies should be submitted and include: final approved
study protocols, statistical analysis plans, any modifications to the study(ies),
raw data, analysis platforms, and full reports.
Abuse liability data - data comparing the abuse liability of the new tobacco
product to the predicate tobacco product and (if applicable) to a grandfathered
tobacco product. Abuse liability can be assessed by a battery of studies, such
as animal models of conditioned place preference, drug discrimination and
self-administration, and human behavioral pharmacology studies that assess
self-administration and subjective effects of the new tobacco product.
Toxicology data - data comparing the toxicity of the new tobacco product to
the predicate tobacco product and (if applicable) to a grandfathered tobacco

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Contains Nonbinding Recommendations
product. Comparisons between the new tobacco product and the predicate
tobacco product can be assessed by a battery of studies, including nonclinical
studies such as in vitro and in vivo mutagenicity and clastogenicity studies,
general toxicology studies that include hematological, clinical chemistry, and
histopathological endpoints, toxicology studies designed to specifically
address cardiac, respiratory, and reproductive/developmental toxicity and
studies to assess the carcinogenic potential.

C. Additional Considerations
•

Where you believe that all the characteristics of the new tobacco product are
identical to those of the predicate tobacco product, except that a minimal
number of ingredients, or materials have been substituted (substitution may
include the same ingredient or material but from a different source), the 905(j)
report should include, in addition to the information described in Section V(A)
above, documentation demonstrating that the substituted ingredient(s) or
material(s) meets the required specifications for the replaced ingredient(s) or
material(s).

Data should be submitted demonstrating equivalence of the substituted ingredient(s)
and/or material(s) with the original ingredient(s) and/or material(s).
•

Where the characteristics of the new tobacco product are different from those of
the predicate tobacco product, FDA recommends that the report include a
separate listing of side-by-side quantitative and qualitative comparisons with the
predicate tobacco product (and the grandfathered tobacco product, where
applicable) of product characteristics that minimally differ between the
submitted product and the predicate tobacco product. This listing should
include the data described in Section V(B) and should include the raw data,
analysis platform, and complete study reports for any differences between the
products.

VI. Confidentiality
Information submitted under section 905(j) of the act may include, but is not limited to, a
company’s non-public trade secret or confidential commercial information.
Several laws govern the confidentiality of substantial equivalence information submitted
under section 905(j) of the act, including sections 301(j) and 906(c) of the act (21 U.S.C.
331(j) and 387f(c)), the Trade Secrets Act (18 U.S.C. 1905), and the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) (5 U.S.C. 552), as well as FDA’s implementing regulations.
FDA’s general regulations concerning the public availability of FDA records are
contained in 21 CFR Part 20.

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Contains Nonbinding Recommendations

VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This guidance contains information collection provisions that are subject to review by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501-3520).
The time required to complete this information collection is estimated to average 360
hours per response, including the time to review instructions, search existing data
sources, gather the data needed, and complete and review the information collection.
Send comments regarding this burden estimate or suggestions for reducing this burden to:
Food and Drug Administration
Center for Tobacco Products
Document Control Center
Building 71, Room G335
10903 New Hampshire Avenue
Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The
OMB control number for this information collection is 0910-0673 (expires 07/31/2014).

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File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleSection 905(j) Reports: Demonstrating Substantial Equivalence for Tobacco Products
SubjectGuidance for Industry and FDA Staff
AuthorFDA/Center for Tobacco Products
File Modified2014-05-29
File Created2014-05-16

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