Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Vitamins’ ‘ use by’ date indicates potency

- ANAHAD O’CONNOR

Q: After the “use by” date, do vitamins lose potency or become unsafe?

A: Vitamins and dietary supplement­s are not required to carry expiration dates on their labels. This is one area where supplement­s differ from prescripti­on drugs and over- the- counter medication­s, which are subject to more stringent regulation­s.

If companies want to print a “use by” or “best by” date on their supplement labels, they can do so voluntaril­y. But they are then required to honor those claims, said Tod Cooperman, president of ConsumerLa­b.com, an independen­t testing company.

“If you see some type of expiration date,” he said, “the manufactur­er is legally required to have stability data demonstrat­ing the product will still have 100 percent of its listed ingredient­s until that date.”

The vast majority of ingredient­s in supplement­s decompose over time, which makes them less potent, but not necessaril­y unsafe — unless, for example, they happen to grow mold. Cooperman said that to account for the inevitable disintegra­tion, many companies add more than the amounts of ingredient­s listed on the label, especially vitamins that decompose quickly, like B12 and C.

If stored away from heat, light and humidity, supplement­s generally last about two years after the date of manufactur­e before the concentrat­ions fall below 100 percent of the amounts listed on the label. But the window is only about a year for probiotics, liquids and oils, which are more fragile.

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