Two Minnesota companies whose Web sites allegedly claimed their amino-acid products could cure or mitigate disease have agreed to stop selling the supplements.
West Duluth Distribution Co., a corporation doing business as CHK Nutrition, and NeuroResearch Clinics Inc., both of Duluth, Minn., signed a consent decree of permanent injunction in the Minnesota U.S. District Court.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration charged that the the companies violated the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act by claiming that CHK Nutrition’s amino-acid products could cure, mitigate, or treat diseases.
The consent decree prohibits the defendants from distributing any of their amino-acid products into interstate commerce unless and until they remove the drug claims from their websites. The defendants also agreed to hire an expert to review the claims they make for their products and certify that they have omitted all violative claims.
Under the decree, FDA can order the defendants to stop distributing their amino-acid products if they fail to comply with the Act or the terms of the decree.
"By ensuring that CHK Nutrition and NeuroResearch can’t distribute these unapproved products, FDA is helping to prevent health risks for consumers that might take these drugs or delay other important treatments,” said Dara A. Corrigan, the FDA’s associate commissioner for regulatory affairs. “Until these companies meet FDA requirements, they will no longer be able to process or distribute their products."
"Amino-acid therapy"
The FDA conducted an inspection of CHK Nutrition and NeuroResearch Clinics in July 2010. During that inspection, an FDA investigator observed evidence of the coordination of the sale of CHK Nutrition’s products with claims that such products are effective treatments for “neurotransmitter diseases.”
In September 2010, the FDA reviewed CHK Nutrition’s website and observed a link to NeuroResearch Clinics’ website containing extensive discussions about “amino-acid therapy” for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, fibromyalgia, and others.
Despite FDA warnings to stop making unapproved drug claims, CHK Nutrition and NeuroResearch Clinics did not do so. The FDA conducted a follow-up review of the companies’ websites in February 2011 and found an ongoing connection between the sale of CHK Nutrition’s products and claims that they can be used to treat diseases.
Karen Calcaterra (Sat, 08 Oct 2011 02:50:37 +0000): These supplements are providing relief for my son's Crohns' Disease symptoms....without the admitted side-effects proven as possible with the alternative, FDA approved, pharmaceutical drugs (immune suppressant, cancer type drugs that cost many times what these do with lesser results). While looking up this article, the page is blanketed with ads by Google from MANY companies making outlandish, unsubstantiated claims, yet they remain in business... wonder why CHK was targeted?
Joyce Stevens (Mon, 23 Jan 2012 17:29:12 +0000): Yes, this is me. I am looking for some kind of help for a friend who has Parkinson's Disease. She is in SO much pain, and here meds do not help. Is there ANYTHING that can help relieve her pain?