The Oklahoman

Fiber fight

- BY CANDICE CHOI AP Food Industry Writer

The revamped Nutrition Facts panel could change what ingredient­s products like Fiber One bars can count as dietary fiber.

NEW YORK — A new labeling rule could change how much fiber is listed for some snack bars and cereals.

A little-discussed aspect of the revamped Nutrition Facts panel, which was postponed this week, is that it could change what ingredient­s products like Fiber One bars can count as dietary fiber.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion says added ingredient­s need to have a health benefit to be counted as fiber on the new panel. And many ingredient­s that are currently used to boost fiber counts haven’t yet gotten the green light to keep doing so.

General Mills Inc., for instance, says its Fiber One brownie has 90 calories and 5 grams of fiber. The brownie lists ingredient­s like sugar-cane fiber and xanthan gum, which are among those being reviewed by the FDA.

Bridget Christenso­n, a General Mills representa­tive, said the FDA has received “more than ample scientific support” for the ingredient­s the company uses to boost fiber. She said General Mills does not expect it will need to make any recipe changes.

So far, the FDA has cleared seven fiber ingredient­s to be counted as fiber. Clearance is pending for another 26 ingredient­s.

Bonnie Liebman, director of nutrition at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, said she thinks food makers “will convince the FDA to approve most of the 26 fibers,” since it’s not that difficult to demonstrat­e some health effect on traits like bowel function. But she said the problem is that such added fibers may lead people to think foods like snack bars are healthier treats.

“Our position is that none of these fibers should count,” Liebman said of the 26 fibers under review and five of the seven that have been approved.

Products with labels touting fiber on their packaging accounted for $12.34 billion in U.S. sales for the year that ended April 1, according to Nielsen. Sales had climbed in 2013 and 2014, but slipped back more recently.

The ingredient­s in question include only synthetic fibers or fibers that have been isolated from foods — not those that occur naturally and are kept intact. So the fiber from oatmeal or chopped apples could continue to be counted as fiber. But isolated “apple fiber” is among the ingredient­s the FDA is reviewing, as well as gum acacia, pea fiber and rice bran fiber.

Deadline is pushed back

Until this week, companies had a July 2018 deadline to start using the new Nutrition Facts panel, which makes it easier to see how many calories and how much added sugar are in products. The Food and Drug Administra­tion said it was pushing back that date this week, though it has not yet announced a new deadline. Industry groups have asked to postpone implementa­tion until 2021.

The FDA said it can’t comment on when it expects to determine whether the 26 ingredient­s can be counted as fiber.

Companies could use the fibers the FDA has already cleared, including psyllium husk and cellulose. But there are many more fibers with different properties that might work well in particular products, said Robert Burns, vice president of health and nutrition policy at the Grocery Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, which represents major packaged food makers.

Burns said there’s no reason to think that fiber ingredient­s would be any less beneficial when they’re isolated and added to a product, versus when they’re consumed as a naturally occurring part of a food. And if companies were to no longer use ingredient­s because they can’t be counted as fiber, he said, people may end up eating less fiber.

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 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Fiber One bars sit on a shelf at a market in New York. Snack bars, cereals and brownies with added fiber may not appear as filling under a new labeling rule.
[AP PHOTO] Fiber One bars sit on a shelf at a market in New York. Snack bars, cereals and brownies with added fiber may not appear as filling under a new labeling rule.
 ?? [FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRA­TION VIA AP] ?? This photo shows a side-by-side comparison of the old, left, and new food Nutrition Facts labels.
[FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRA­TION VIA AP] This photo shows a side-by-side comparison of the old, left, and new food Nutrition Facts labels.

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