The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FDA blocks concentrat­ed caffeine sales

Crackdown is nearly 4 years after death of Alpharetta engineer.

- By Lois Norder lois.norder@ajc.com

The morning that James Wade Sweatt first tried a powdered caffeine supplement, his heart went into cardiac arrest. For the next 11 days, he was in a coma. Despite efforts to save him, the 24-yearold Alpharetta engineer died.

Now, nearly four years after his death, the federal Food and Drug Administra­tion has announced a crackdown on highly concentrat­ed caffeine products, saying they pose a significan­t public health risk. The agency said Friday that dietary supplement­s containing highly concentrat­ed caffeine in powder or liquid forms are now considered illegal, and it is prepared to take immediate steps to begin remov- ing them from the market.

Such action has been the goal of Sweatt’s parents, who have worked for years along with the parents of another young victim to try to stop companies from selling the products.

“The people who sell it had been warned, and they just con- tinued to do it,” said Julie Sweatt, of Gardendale, Ala.

“We have been to Washington and spoken to the FDA and pleaded with them to save other lives by banning the caffeine powder,” she said.

“Our goal in all this — we already had lost our son and could not bring him back — was to make sure no other family went through what our family went through.”

The FDA has repeatedly taken action against the concentrat­ed caffeine products in the past, but it noted that they continued to be marketed to consumers as dietary supplement­s, often over the internet, and sold in bulk quantities, with up to thousands of recommende­d servings per container. It is nearly impossible to accurately measure those products, the agency has said.

“The amounts used can too easily become deceptivel­y high because of the super-concentrat­ed forms and bulk packaging in which the caffeine is being sold,” said FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb in a prepared statement.

A single teaspoon of a highly concentrat­ed caffeine powder can be a toxic dose, containing as much caffeine as 20 to 28 cups of coffee, the agency said.

Wade Sweatt and Logan James Stiner, an 18-year-old high school senior who also died in 2014, were otherwise healthy young men. Wade was a newlywed who had just begun a job in the Atlanta area. Logan was prom king and an athlete at his high school.

The caffeine supplement­s they bought were marketed as a way to boost energy, and the young men believed a caffeine supplement would be safe, the families have said.

“We don’t teach our kids that caffeine can kill you,” Julie Sweatt said.

While the FDA’s announceme­nt noted only the two men’s deaths, Sweatt said that other caffeine-related deaths may go unrecogniz­ed.

“When someone dies of a caffeine powder or caffeine-related overdose,

it comes up as a cardiac arrest,” she said.

Unless someone knows that the person has taken a caffeine product, as happened in her son’s case, tests would not be done during

autopsy for the substance.

Deaths related to dietary supplement­s also can go unrecogniz­ed because FDA learns about serious health issues through a process that largely relies on individual­s to voluntaril­y report adverse events. And unlike prescripti­on drugs, supplement­s can be legally sold without companies’ first providing proof they are safe and effective.

The FDA sent warning letters in 2015 to companies in North Carolina, Oregon, California and Nevada marketing the products, and in 2016 warned companies in Illinois and Minnesota. The FDA warned that the supplement­s presented a significan­t or unreasonab­le risk of injury or illness under the use suggested in labeling, or that the products were being promoted for conditions that cause them to be considered a drug.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY DRUGABUSE.GOV ?? Caffeine powder is dangerous. A teaspoon of a highly concentrat­ed powder can be toxic, with as much caffeine as 20 to 28 cups of coffee, the FDA said.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY DRUGABUSE.GOV Caffeine powder is dangerous. A teaspoon of a highly concentrat­ed powder can be toxic, with as much caffeine as 20 to 28 cups of coffee, the FDA said.

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