- June 30, 2026
- Updated 10:52 pm
FDA’s Recent Decision on Fruit-Flavored E-Cigarettes Raises Questions
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently authorized fruit-flavored e-cigarettes, yet new information reveals these products did not significantly help smokers quit compared to tobacco-flavored options. This decision, approved last month, endorsed fruit-flavored vapes as less harmful than traditional cigarettes, prompting backlash from health groups and lawmakers concerned about the appeal to children.
A recent six-page memo from the FDA details the agency’s reasoning. FDA regulators acknowledged limitations in the data from Glas Inc., which had to demonstrate that their products benefit public health by helping adult smokers switch or quit, without attracting teens. The study showed smokers using Glas vapes were more likely to switch from cigarettes in three months, but no significant difference was found between adults using fruit flavors and those using tobacco-flavored e-cigarettes.
This finding means Glas failed to meet the higher bar set by previously approved products like Juul and NJOY’s menthol vapes. Those products showed adults were more likely to quit using menthol than tobacco flavors. FDA regulators stated that Glas did not need to demonstrate additional adult benefits since their age-verifying app reduces youth access.
The FDA’s decision contradicts recent guidelines requiring fruit and dessert flavors to meet strict evidence standards. Tobacco-flavored products generally meet lower regulatory hurdles due to their unpopularity among teens.
The memo on Glas’s approval is notably short compared to past documents, such as Juul’s menthol vape authorization which spanned over 90 pages. It lacks details like the number of smokers studied. Typically, the FDA releases such memos soon after authorization, but the Glas document appeared over a month later.
Congress members have questioned the agency’s decision, with 10 Democratic senators labeling it “shortsighted and reckless” in a request for further information. Glas’s application included menthol and tobacco flavors and faced a complicated journey to approval. The Los Angeles-based company submitted a marketing request to the FDA in 2021. In February, some flavors were approved, but decisions were blocked by a senior official under the then-FDA Commissioner. Mango and blueberry products gained approval during his last week, following criticism and lobbying efforts from tobacco companies.
Attempts to reach Glas for comment were unsuccessful.
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