Application of the “Novel Foods” Regulation to Botanicals in the European Union
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Establishment of Novel Food Status: To begin, a food operator must determine if the product in question was widely consumed in the European Union before 15 May 1997. In case there are no clear records of its consumption, a consultation request is required. This request is reviewed and verified by the Member States to ensure its validity. Detailed guidelines have been established in Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2018/456, in order to standardize this process.
- Demonstration of Significant Consumption History: In cases where conclusive information is not found after consulting previous records, it falls on the producer, importer, or other parties responsible for marketing in the EU market to provide the necessary information justifying that the product is not subject to the scope of Regulation (EU) 2015/2283. It is crucial to emphasize that economic operators play a crucial role in ensuring compliance with current food safety legislation.
- Application for New Authorization of a Novel Food (Application Procedure): Once it is confirmed that a food is classified as “novel,” it must undergo a safety assessment carried out by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) before authorization is granted for its marketing throughout the European Union, in accordance with Regulation (EU) 2015/2283 on novel foods.
2. How to Determine Whether a Product Is a “Novel Food”
2.1. Establishment of Novel Food Status
2.2. Safe Use History
- When the specific compounds responsible for the benefits or safety concerns are identified, their presence and quantity in the preparation should match those in the traditional one. In this case, it can be demonstrated that the preparations faithfully represent the traditional preparation, validating the associated benefits and safety.
- If the beneficial effects or safety concerns are associated with compounds from a well-known chemical group, the chemical profile of this group should be akin, both qualitatively and quantitatively, to that of the traditional preparation. Depending on the chemical group in question, preparations can be standardized or quantified.
- In cases where the compounds responsible for the beneficial effects or safety concerns are unidentified, the chemical composition of the preparation must mirror that of the traditional one for traditional knowledge about benefits and safety to be applicable.
2.3. Concentration Methods of Bioactive Ingredients
- Market History: The regulation maintains 15 May 1997, as the cutoff for determining meaningful use. However, due to the inclusion of the term “produced from,” it could potentially encompass numerous foods from plants or plant parts on the market between 15 May 1997, and 1 January 2018. Nonetheless, products legally on the market should generally not face retroactive challenges, especially those properly notified to national authorities in compliance with national and EU regulations.
- Nature of the Product: The degree of processing can significantly alter foods from their source material. Foods closer in characteristics to the source material or a traditionally used food from the same source material are more likely to retain the safe use history. This is particularly relevant for isolated foods, which retain fewer of these characteristics, while other preparations and extracts may preserve more.
- Novel food authorizations: An authorized selective extract, Glavonoid®, is derived from licorice root (Glycyrrhiza glabra L.) using ethanol and medium chain triglycerides (MCT). It contains 30% ethanolic licorice root extract and 70% MCT, with a reported 24% polyphenol content. This process significantly alters the plant’s profile by concentrating hydrophobic polyphenolic substances and reducing glycyrrhizinic acid below 0.005% (w/w) (European Commission 2011a).
- Notable additions to the Catalog of Novel Foods have emerged from Member State discussions: Griffonia seeds simplicifolia, used exclusively in food supplements before 15 May 1997, are considered a novel food, potentially subject to national restrictions (March 2022). Curcuminoids from turmeric extract (Curcuma longa L.) used exclusively in food supplements before 15 May 1997, may contain various curcuminoids. Any process enhancing solubility or bioavailability could be subject to novel food regulations (since June 2022).
- Constitute or be derived from a new (novel) source: that is, a new animal, plant or microbiological species.
- Be derived from a new (novel) process: that is, the use of new (novel) technologies (in the field of food) on conventional food sources, could, just because they are not known, structurally modify the sources giving rise to some possible risk for the consumer.
- In the case of food: If the food and the manufacturing process were used in the EU before 14 May 1997.
- In the case of food supplements: If there is national legislation that authorizes their use as long as the manufacturing process is not new (novel).
- The traditional (not novel) manufacturing processes that should be part of those included in the “List of traditional food preparation procedures” of Annex II of Regulation No. 1334/2008 (European Commission 2008), which includes the provisions of Section 4 of the Recommendation. 97/618/EC of the Commission (European Commission 1997b) (Class 6: “Food produced by a new process” which includes foods and food ingredients that have been subjected to a process not traditionally used in food production and that therefore fall within the scope of application of novel foods legislation which indicates that the resulting product is considered a novel food if the process causes a modification of the structure or chemical composition of the food ingredient that affects its nutritional value, metabolism or level of undesirable substances).
- The use of extraction solvents in relation to Directive 2009/32/EC.
- The definition of “partially” processed food established in Article 2 of Regulation No. 178/2002 (European Commission 2002) (For the purposes of this Regulation, “food” (or “food product”) shall be understood as any substance or product intended to be ingested by man or with a reasonable probability of being so, whether or not it has been totally or partially transformed.
- Further explanation of “significant” consumption of a food as any food that was not used to a large extent for human consumption in the Union before 15 May 1997, regardless of the accession dates of the Member States to the Union and that falls into at least one of the categories of the Novel Foods Regulation.
2.4. Nanomaterials
3. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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Parameter | Details | |
---|---|---|
Identity | Scientific name (including author), see vernacular and common name, botanical family | |
Scope of use | Widespread in populations/regions | |
Time/duration of use | Over generations (e.g., ≥25–30 years) | |
Conditions of Use | Collection and treatment of botanical | Fresh, dry, etc. |
Botanical part | Leaf, flower, fruit, seed, root, stem, pollen, bark, tuber, rhizome, resin, exudates, etc. | |
Mode/nature of preparation | Botanical whole or part, fresh, juice, dried, cooked, infused, extracted, distilled, etc. | |
How to use | Orally, individually or in combinations (mixtures), etc. | |
Usage quantity | Amount and frequency of intake | |
Use provided | Benefit, nutritional and physiological | |
Documentation | Authentic texts (Books, recipes, monographs, recognized textbooks, scientific and other publications |
Traditional Preparation | Characteristics | |
---|---|---|
Crushed or dried herb powder | Powders are prepared from plant material (bark, root, leaf, etc.) that is dried at a predetermined temperature. If necessary, the product is sieved to generally allow 97% of the material to pass through. | |
Tinctures | Tinctures are liquid preparations that are generally obtained by percolation or maceration in ethanol (for example, one part plant and five parts alcohol, the alcoholic strength of which is specific for the type of plant in question) or by dissolving a dry extract in alcohol of appropriate alcoholic strength (generally 45° to 70°). | |
Extracts | Extracts are liquid (liquid extracts and tinctures), semisolid (soft or firm extracts) or solid (dry extracts) preparations generally obtained from dried plant material. Titrated extracts are adjusted by an inert substance or by mixing batches of extracts, with an acceptable tolerance for the content of particular compounds with known physiological activity. Quantitative extracts are adjusted to a certain range of components by mixing batches of extracts. | Maceration: the raw plant material, finely distributed, is brought into contact with the total volume of solvent and kept for several days at room temperature, protected from light and shaken frequently. The mixture is removed and the remains (pomace or pomace) are pressed. The extracted solution becomes an extract after the evaporation of the solvent. |
Percolation: Extraction is carried out by slowly and frequently passing the solvent through the plant powder in a percolator. The quantities of solvents and plants, the duration and flow rate of the solvent, the temperature and agitation, the granulometry of the plant, and the type of apparatus used are parameters that can influence the extraction. | ||
Liquid extracts | Liquid extracts are preparations in which, in general, one part by weight or volume corresponds to one part by weight of dry plant. These preparations are adjusted, if necessary, to achieve the desired level of components. The advantage is that 1 g of liquid extract corresponds to 1 g of dry plant. The extraction process is carried out with ethanol of adequate strength or with water. | |
Liquid Glycerin Extracts | These extracts are generally obtained from freeze-dried or ground fresh plant material, to avoid the degradation of the active compounds. A first extraction with a mixture of water and alcohol of increasing concentration allows the water-soluble and fat-soluble compounds to be obtained. The solvent is removed in vacuo and the extract is resuspended in a glycerin solution (15% water and 85% glycerin). This form is the one that most closely approximates the chemical profile of the fresco. | |
Soft or firm extracts | Soft and firm extracts are semisolid preparations obtained by the evaporation or partial evaporation of the material used for the production of the extract. | |
Dry extracts | Dry extracts are solid preparations obtained by the evaporation of the solvent with which the extract was produced. The solvent can be water (aqueous extract) or alcohol, whose graduation is important (hydroalcoholic extract). | |
Essential oils | The essential oil can be obtained by the steam (water) treatment of dried or fresh plant material, possibly followed by rectification, and by the mechanical pressing of the fresh pericarp (citrus peel) without applying heat. Steam hydrodistillation gives rise to two fractions: a lipophilic fraction (the essential oil), which generally floats (in most cases the density is less than 1) and an aqueous fraction, which is called “distilled water” from plant. Obviously, the components of both fractions are not the same. It is also possible to extract compounds using supercritical C02, but the product obtained cannot be called “essential oil”. | |
Oleoresin and gum-oleoresin | An oleoresin is a natural secretion of a plant, obtained by incisions in the bark of the tree, like the exudates of conifers. It consists of a mixture of oxidized essential oil and resins. Other gums, resins or gum-resins, are mixtures of complex resinous compounds, gums and volatile compounds. | |
Balms | Balms are specific natural oleoresins characterized by the presence of benzoic acid and/or cinnamic acid and their esters. Many preparations are incorrectly called balm. | |
Alcoholate | These preparations are liquid solutions obtained by the distillation of generally fresh plant material in ethanol. Alcoholates can be obtained from a single plant (simple alcoholate) or from a mixture of several plants (mixed alcoholate). | |
Alcohol | This preparation is obtained by the maceration of fresh plant material in highly concentrated cold ethanol to preserve compounds that would lose their activity if they dried. | |
Intract | This is a plant extract obtained after treating the plant using heat or alcoholic vapors in order to deactivate the enzymes present in the plant. | |
Macerated | There are two types of maceration: Cold maceration applied to all parts of the plants rich in mucilage and hot maceration used for the hard parts of the plants (root, wood). The mash can be aqueous or oily, depending on the type of substances (hydrophilic or lipophilic). It is generally applied to dry plant material to avoid the presence of water naturally present in the plant. | |
Mellitum | This is a complex and viscous liquid vegetable preparation in which honey is a main ingredient along with an aqueous component (water, vinegar, etc.). |
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Morán, J.; Kilasoniya, A. Application of the “Novel Foods” Regulation to Botanicals in the European Union. Laws 2024, 13, 10. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13010010
Morán J, Kilasoniya A. Application of the “Novel Foods” Regulation to Botanicals in the European Union. Laws. 2024; 13(1):10. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13010010
Chicago/Turabian StyleMorán, Javier, and Alina Kilasoniya. 2024. "Application of the “Novel Foods” Regulation to Botanicals in the European Union" Laws 13, no. 1: 10. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13010010
APA StyleMorán, J., & Kilasoniya, A. (2024). Application of the “Novel Foods” Regulation to Botanicals in the European Union. Laws, 13(1), 10. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13010010