Los Angeles Times

Push to regulate herbal remedy grows

Amid concern over kratom’s medicinal use, California seeks oversight of chemical content and sales.

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

It comes in greenish powders, capsules and extracts, and is readily found in smoke shops and online.

Some say they use it for an energy boost or as a mood lifter. Others seek relief from pain. It can act both as a stimulant and as a sedative. Doctors have warned that in some cases, it has spurred seizures or vomiting, and the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion categorize­s it among its “drugs of concern.”

Yet “kratom is not regulated at all in California,” said Assemblyme­mber Matt Haney (D-San Francisco). Right now, there are “not even labeling requiremen­ts or age restrictio­ns.”

Kratom products are derived from the leaves of the Mitragyna speciosa tree in Southeast Asia, where the plant has long been chewed and brewed in teas. Its complex effects have been tied to mitragynin­e and other alkaloids — chemical compounds containing nitrogen — that act on systems in the brain and body.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has warned against using kratom for medical treatment, stressing that it has not approved any medication­s containing kratom and that it cannot be legally marketed in the U.S. as a dietary supplement.

Yet roughly 2 million people in the U.S. use kratom, according to estimates from a federal survey, and some researcher­s and advocates say usage is actually much higher. Among those who have turned to the herbal substance is Dijon Evans, a 61-year-old living in Sacramento, who has a medical condition that racks her with pain.

“My body feels like I’m being electrocut­ed from the inside out. I get these sharp electrical jolts that shoot

through my body and my limbs,” Evans said. At one point, she started planning to end her life.

Someone on Facebook suggested kratom. Evans said she read up on it, talked to her doctors and family, and decided to order some kratom powder. It arrived in the mail. She downed half a teaspoon in orange juice.

The pain fell to a tolerable level, she said. “I was dumbfounde­d,” said Evans, who had been skeptical of herbal supplement­s. “Here’s something that I held no hope in helping me — and it quite literally saved my life.”

The Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion backed off on plans eight years ago to designate kratom as a “Schedule I” drug, a restrictiv­e category for drugs without any accepted medical use, after pushback from kratom advocates and lawmakers.

But a patchwork of state and local laws has sprung up amid concerns about the array of kratom products found in stores and online, which researcher­s warn could have starkly different effects. In California, where kratom has become a common fixture in vape and smoke shops, lawmakers are now aiming to reel in an unregulate­d market.

Under Assembly Bill 2365, the measure proposed this year by Haney, the state would require kratom products to be registered with the public health department. It would also regulate their chemical content, mandate labeling with alkaloid amounts and warnings that kratom may be habit forming, and bar kratom sales to anyone under age 21.

“There are enough risks that it shouldn’t be a total free-for-all,” Haney said. “People should know what they’re buying. Kids shouldn’t buy it. And we should make it clear that there’s a difference between a bottle that may seem the same size — but may have exponentia­lly more potency.”

The proposed rules also prohibit kratom products from containing synthesize­d forms of kratom chemicals that have troubled some researcher­s and advocates, who warn that such products could veer far from the chemical profile in the plant.

Matthew Lowe, executive director of the advocacy group Global Kratom Coalition, said some synthetic products have “very, very high doses” of a particular chemical found in scant amounts in kratom leaf material.

Several kr atom researcher­s have warned that chemical—7-hydroxy m it ragy nine — poses a higher risk of abuse.

And in the absence of regulation — including requiremen­ts for clear labeling — consumers may unwittingl­y use more of the substance than they expect, Lowe said.

The California bill is backed by law enforcemen­t groups, a coalition of which praised the proposal as “a first step in regulating this mind-altering substance.”

Bans on kratom now speckle the country, including entire states such as Alabama as well as California cities including San Diego and Newport Beach. The American Kratom Assn., an advocacy group that opposes such bans, said regulation­s requiring labeling and other standards are needed to protect consumers. The group has promoted a set of rules called the “Kratom Consumer Protection Act,” which were adopted in a dozen states as of mid-April.

But Mac Haddow, its senior fellow on public policy, argued

that the California bill “goes too far” and would necessitat­e a costly enforcemen­t structure that “would impose a huge fiscal burden on taxpayers.”

For instance, Haddow said proposed rules related to the ratio of different alkaloids in products would require “highly sensitive scientific equipment” and “a significan­t number of kratom experts to enforce.” If the costs are borne by sellers, he said, registrati­on fees would be “astronomic­al and force many products out of the market.”

Haney said he remains open to hashing out such issues. “We are trying to both give consumers the informatio­n to protect themselves,” he said, “and also draw the lines” about what products should be allowed.

The push for new regulation­s comes as kratom has continued to draw both interest and concern. The National Institute on Drug Abuse is exploring medicinal uses for kratom, including as a possible treatment for opioid addiction, but cautions that researcher­s are still learning more about its effects.

“Unlike something like caffeine or cannabis that’s really acting on one system [in the brain and body], this is acting on many different systems,” said Kirsten Smith, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University.

Smith said regular use of kratom can lead to mild to moderate withdrawal symptoms from halting use. In a survey of kratom users, she and other researcher­s found that most “reported using kratom in a seemingly nonproblem­atic way,” and more frequent use was not associated with “social or functional impairment.”

The National Institute on Drug Abuse says more research is needed into kratom and the risk of addiction. Some California­ns say they’ve grappled with kratom addiction: Nick, a 44-year-old living in North Hollywood who asked not to use his last name to discuss his substance use, said he had recovered from addiction to heroin and oxycodone when a friend recommende­d kratom.

He said he had higher energy and remained “quite functional” for a few years, but eventually “my entire day orbited around kratom use .... It was just consuming every aspect of my life.” He ultimately went to Alcoholics Anonymous for help, he said.

Yet others have credited it with helping them shake off addiction to other substances. In San Bernardino County, Jordan Richard said he began using it after an opioid overdose to manage his “addictive tendencies.”

Without it, “I’d be dead or in jail,” said Richard, a 33year-old who now owns a company that sells kratom powder and capsules.

Among the physical effects of kratom exposure that have raised concerns are cardiovasc­ular effects such as changes in blood pressure, as well as seizures, said Chris McCurdy, a University of Florida chemist, behavioral pharmacolo­gist and pharmacist.

Although some of its effects echo those of opioids, the mixture of chemicals normally present in kratom — such as in powdered leaf products — has not shown the same dangerous effects on breathing as opioids such as heroin or fentanyl, researcher­s said.

Experts have also stressed that not all kratom is equal. McCurdy likened the modern range in kratom products to the difference between light beer and Everclear. One of the key questions facing scientists, he said, is what levels are safe and potentiall­y beneficial and what amounts could become harmful.

In the U.S., “we supersize everything. It’s become more and more concentrat­ed,” he said.

Researcher­s have raised particular concern about synthesize­d products that isolate chemicals like 7- hydroxy m it ragy nine, saying they could carry risks that are different from the kratom leaf long used in Thailand or Malaysia.

Smith said that “the further you get away from the botanical that’s been used for hundreds of years in Southeast Asia, the less we know about it — and the more uncertaint­y we have.”

Among the “rare but serious” effects physicians have reported are seizures, vomiting and liver problems, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Kratom has also been involved in a small fraction of U.S. overdose deaths, although most also involved other drugs, analyses have found.

In California, medical examiners and coroners tallied 87 “kratom involved” deaths in 2022 — fatalities in which kratom or mitragynin­e were listed on a death certificat­e. However, only seven of the death certificat­es mentioned kratom as the only substance involved, according to data provided by the state public health department.

Molly Bowdring, a research fellow at the Stanford Prevention Research Center, said if people are taking kratom with other drugs or substances, it’s possible there could be a “compound effect.”

“We just don’t have enough data to suggest that it is completely safe,” Bowdring said.

In some cases, families of people who died after taking kratom for pain relief have successful­ly sued kratom sellers, faulting them for inadequate warnings about health risks. In California, lawsuits have been filed against the beverage company Botanic Tonics alleging it “misleading­ly omitted the effects of kratom” in marketing materials.

Botanic Tonics has denied the allegation­s in court filings. A spokespers­on said the company supports “more robust regulation” such as AB 2365.

“Our belief is that consumers have the right and expectatio­n to know what they are consuming,” he said.

 ?? Mary Esch Associated Press ?? THE FDA has warned consumers against using kratom for medical treatment, stressing that it has not approved medication­s containing the herbal substance.
Mary Esch Associated Press THE FDA has warned consumers against using kratom for medical treatment, stressing that it has not approved medication­s containing the herbal substance.

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