Just
months after the publication of a USA
Today investigation of Matt Cahill and his infamous dietary supplement empire,
two teams of researchers reported the presence of a “meth-like” compound in
various lots of the pre-workout supplement Craze®.1,2 One
of Cahill’s best-selling formulations and BodyBuilding.com’s 2012 New
Supplement of the Year, Craze touts in its online product description an
ability to provide users with “seemingly endless energy,” “heightened focus,”
and “unrelenting confidence.”3,4
The
supplement’s performance-enhancing claims — and reason for concern in the
herbal and dietary supplements industry — stem from one ingredient in
particular, Dendrobex®, Driven Sports’ trademarked name for
dendrobium (Dendrobium nobile,
Orchidaceae) stem extract. According to the company, Dendrobex is not a
standardized extract of a single chemical (Driven Sports email to T. Smith,
October 1, 2013); rather, it is comprised of several alkaloids that are listed
on the supplement’s label (See Table 1.). Before Craze was introduced in 2011 to
the fitness and bodybuilding communities, dendrobium may have been best known
as a popular ornamental plant and an herb used in Traditional Chinese Medicine.3
Today, the orchid family member is at the center of the sports supplement
sector’s latest controversy.
Just
as DMAA — a sports supplement ingredient with manufacturer-claimed botanical
origins — evoked memories of the
diet aid and sports-enhancement debacle of the 1990s related to the use and/or
misuse of extracts of the herb ephedra (Ephedra
sinica) in dietary supplements, some in the dietary supplements industry
are referring to dendrobium extract as the “new DMAA.”5 Dendrobex,
however, differs from DMAA in that it is not a single chemical. From early 2011
through 2013, debate raged over the natural or synthetic origin of DMAA in
supplements, its status as a new dietary ingredient (NDI, thereby requiring a US
Food and Drug Administration [FDA] review for its safety prior to being
introduced into the market), and whether or not the compound could be found in
geranium plants — its alleged source — at any measurable level. According to
the FDA, “[although] DMAA at one time was approved as a drug for nasal
decongestion, no medical use of DMAA is recognized today,” nor is there any
reliable published scientific data showing that it occurs naturally in plants.6
As the American Botanical Council and others have reported
previously, its alleged plant source has been questioned and shown to be
non-existent by various analytical chemistry experts, based on several studies
published in peer-reviewed journals.7
“DMAA was, in some ways, symbolic of the
challenges facing sports nutrition products built for an audience actively
seeking that next line-crossing ingredient,” explained Marc Brush, editorial
director of New Hope Natural Media, which referred to dendrobium as a potential
replacement for DMAA in May 2012 (email, September 25, 2013).5 “As
such, I expect the process — unclear natural origin,
insufficient sourcing of the raw material to realistically meet market demand,
lack of NDIs and safety dossiers around the synthetic analogues, FDA scrutiny,
media scandal, retailers and manufacturers quickly distancing themselves from
the ingredient —
to repeat itself, with dendrobium next in line.”
PEA Prominence: Recent
Analyses Reveal “Meth-Like” Compound
In
an article published in Drug Testing and
Analysis on October 14, 2013, scientists from Harvard Medical School and
NSF International, a respected third-party testing organization, reported the
presence of N,α-diethyl-phenylethylamine (N,α-DEPEA) in three samples of Craze purchased from various retailers.
Using established reference standards and sensitive analytical methods, Cohen
et al. found N,α-DEPEA concentrations ranging
from 21 to 35 mg per serving in the tested supplements.1
Working in conjunction with Cohen et al., researchers from the
Korean Forensic Service confirmed the chemical’s signature in two separate
batches of Craze. As reported in Forensic
Toxicology, Lee et al. found 0.40 and 0.44% N,α-DEPEA,
respectively — the equivalent of roughly 23 mg per serving.2
N,α-DEPEA is a member of a broad class of substances known as
phenylethylamines (PEAs). PEAs, as noted by Cohen et al. in their recent paper,
“range from benign compounds found in chocolate to synthetically produced
illicit drugs.”1 However, as Lee et al. explained, simple structural
changes in PEAs can have significant effects on their potency and toxicity. This is particularly evident with N,α-DEPEA, the chemical structure of which differs from
methamphetamine by only two chemical groups.2
Although the chemical was originally patented in 1988 by Knoll
Pharmaceuticals for cognitive-enhancing effects and the ability to increase pain
tolerance, N,α-DEPEA was never manufactured or marketed as a drug.2
Since then, according to the authors of the aforementioned analyses, no human
studies have been conducted on the compound.1,2
“There is a possibility that [N,α-DEPEA] has a
stimulating effect similar to methamphetamine because their chemical structures
are very similar,” stated Lee et al. in their paper.2 “The
manufacturer of the supplement has advertised that the effects of the product
are caused by the labeled ingredients including creatinine [sic] and dendrobium
extract. However, the stimulating effects or intoxications induced by the
product are probably caused by the presence of an effective dose of undeclared
[N,α-DEPEA].”
Table
1. List of Craze® Ingredients4
|
Dendrobex®
(dendrobium stem extract), consisting of:
|
Dendrobine,
dendroxine, dendramine, beta-phenylethylamine, N,N-dimethyl-beta-phenylethylamine,
and N,N-diethyl-beta-phenylethylamine
|
Other ingredients:
|
Creatine
monohydrate, trimethylglycine (betaine anhydrous), L-citrulline,
beta-phenylethylamine HCl, Citramine® (Citrus reticulata fruit
extract, concentrated for N-methyltyramine content), caffeine anhydrous
| Mahmoud ElSohly, PhD, a research professor at the University of
Mississippi, mentioned other potential health issues in an article on ESPN.com.8
“The problem with this compound is that it hasn’t been studied,” he was quoted
as saying. “At some levels, you could see blood pressure go up. At
larger levels, you could be talking about serious side effects, maybe heart
attacks.” Due to its similarity to methamphetamine and unknown health
effects in humans, both research teams called for immediate action from the FDA
and other regulatory bodies, including consumer warnings and the removal of all
N,α-DEPEA-containing supplements from the marketplace.1-2 “What’s on our radar is people are claiming that dendrobium has
certain phenylethylamines — phenylethylamines
that have a profound biological effect, not dissimilar from some of the things
we’ve recently taken action on,” said Daniel Fabricant, PhD, director of the FDA’s
Division of Dietary Supplement Programs (oral communication, September 26,
2013). “We’ve got to take everything on a case-by-case basis.” In October, in response to the negative publicity resulting from these
analyses, Driven Sports issued a statement on its blog refuting the
authors’ findings. The company wrote that analyses of Craze conducted on its
behalf indicate the presence of N,Beta-DEPEA,
not N,alpha-DEPEA.9 “This
is a related but very different substance from the one identified by NSF,”
Driven Sports states on its website. “It is also very difficult to distinguish
these two substances unless you know precisely what you are looking for and are
using the proper test methodology.… Because of its similar chemical
composition, failure to take into account the presence of n-beta could cause a
mistaken conclusion that any given sample contains n-alpha.”9 Despite
the structural similarity of the alpha and beta forms of DEPEA, researchers can
differentiate the compounds using appropriate analytical methods. “Using [gas chromatography-mass spectrometry] I can easily distinguish
these from each other,” said natural products analytical expert James Neal-Kababick,
founder and director of Oregon-based Flora Research Laboratories. “They are positional isomers of the same molecule, but that could
have a dramatic pharmacological difference.” In
their recently published analyses, Cohen et al. used
ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) and
quadruple-time-of-flight (Q-TOF) mass spectrometry,1 while Lee et
al. utilized gas chromatography and mass spectrometry.2 “Having reviewed the data from these papers I believe
that they were well done and fairly comprehensive,” Neal-Kababick said. In a statement published in USA Today, Cohen et al. dismissed Driven Sports’ argument, saying
that the company was “just
throwing out new chemical names to try to confuse.… We stand 100% behind our results.”10
Driven Sports’ confirmation of N,Beta-DEPEA
in Craze, however, may also be troubling to some regulators. “[N,Beta-DEPEA] is a positional isomer [of N,α-DEPEA] and may still be considered an
analogue of amphetamine under the analogue drug act,” Neal-Kababick noted. “What differs is the carbon on the ethylamine that the side chain is
attached to (that is, the alpha or beta carbon).”
Previous Analyses, Contradictory Findings In
June 2012, the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) added Craze to its High Risk
Dietary Supplements list, citing stimulant ingredients prohibited by the World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).11 According to USADA, the tested lot of
Craze contained “amphetamine,”
“N-methylphenethylamine,” “Beta-methylphenethylamine,” and “ethylamphetamine.” Additionally,
the organization’s High Risk List includes Gaspari Nutrition’s Detonate™ supplement,
which also claims to contain dendrobium extract. Detonate — which as of
December 2013 is no longer for sale on Gaspari Nutrition’s website — was
similarly cited for containing the WADA-prohibited stimulants “Beta-methylphenethylamine,”
“N-methylphenethylamine,” “ethylamphetamine,” and “amphetamine.”
In
April 2013, Craze made headlines after the Swedish National Laboratory of
Forensic Science detected the presence of “N-etyl-1-fenyl-butan-2-amine” —
otherwise known as N,α-DEPEA — and “fenetylamin,” or phenylethylamine in
English.12,13 Driven
Sports responded, calling the findings erroneous and blaming the results on the
agency’s testing of an inauthentic, or “copycat,” version of Craze.14
From
April to July 2013, Driven Sports had more than 30 lots of Craze tested14 for
N,α-DEPEA by Avomeen Analytical Services, a
Michigan-based independent chemical testing laboratory. Using liquid chromatography-mass
spectrometry (LC-MS) and a certified reference standard, Avomeen failed to detect
the presence of N,α-DEPEA in all samples. Driven Sports
has made the certificates of analysis available to the public on its blog.15
Mass spectrometry, as performed in LC-MS and GC-MS analyses, works by
separating a test compound into charged fragments (often by hitting the
compound with a beam of energy) and analyzing the resulting patterns, which provides
the test compound’s mass.16
The differences between the analytical methods, Flora Research’s Neal-Kababick
explained, are subtle but significant. “The
issue with LCMS over GCMS is that [with] LCMS … the data [are] not always
directly comparable to data from other systems or the same system with
different collision voltages.”
Also in July 2013, the sports supplement manufacturer Tiger Fitness
commissioned Phytochemical Services Inc. to test two batches of Craze using a LC/MS/MS.
The lab confirmed the presence of “N-ethyl-1-phenyl-2-butylamine” — another
synonym for N,α-DEPEA12 — in both
batches.
Regardless
of the nuances of various analytical methods, Neal-Kababick emphasized that
experience is vital to getting accurate and reproducible results. “A
lab can have technology and all sorts of fancy accreditations and such but that
does not make them experts in clandestine adulteration screening,” he wrote.
“If labs are not experts in this area, they are likely to miss things and
encounter challenges.”
DMAA Déjà Vu: Questions of Legality
Roughly
two years after Matthew Cahill introduced Craze into the marketplace, questions
remain about its status as a legal dietary supplement. Do the components of
Craze’s “dendrobium extract” occur naturally in dendrobium? Are the “botanical-sourced”
ingredients in Craze natural or synthetic? Is dendrobium extract a new dietary
ingredient, thereby requiring that its marketer notify FDA with appropriate
safety data 75 days prior to putting the ingredient on the market? Regardless
of the answers to these questions, the analyses published in October 2013 that
detected the presence of N,α-DEPEA in various lots of Craze may render these
regulatory questions moot. Analogs of
Controlled Substances? “N,alpha-diethylphenylethylamine is a chemical
analogue, cousin if you will, of methamphetamine,” explained John Travis, PhD, a
senior research scientist at NSF International and co-author of the recent Drug Testing and Analysis paper (email,
December 5, 2013). “It differs by an additional methyl group on the N-alkyl
chain and an additional methyl group on the backbone alkyl chain. Because
of this similarity, it would be regulated under the Federal Analog Act of
1986. A compound like this should never be found in any dietary
supplement.” The
Federal Analog Act of 1986 states that a “controlled substance analogue shall, to
the extent intended for human consumption, be treated, for the purposes of any
Federal law as a controlled substance in schedule I.”17 Since both
methamphetamine and amphetamine — as well as their salts, isomers, and salts of
isomers — are considered schedule II stimulants, an analog of any of these chemicals
would be considered a schedule I controlled substance under federal law.18 US
Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) spokesman Rusty Payne reiterated this point in an
October 2013 USA Today article — one
of many in the paper’s investigative series on questionable dietary supplements.
“Anytime
there's a controlled substance or an analog of a controlled substance, that
becomes a criminal issue,” he said. “If designer drugs are now making their way
into dietary supplements across the world, that's obviously dangerous and very
scary.”19
In
the same article, FDA’s Dr. Fabricant agreed that the legal implications in
this case are clear. “If [the DEA] determine[s] something is an analog, our law
ties directly into that,” he was quoted as saying. “If an analog of a
controlled substance is in a product sold as a dietary supplement, it is not
legally a dietary supplement.”19 New Dietary
Ingredient? Even
if the DEA and/or FDA were to forgo action based on the Federal Analog Act, the
status of dendrobium extract as a legal dietary ingredient remains murky. According
to FDA’s background document for industry members, an NDI is
defined as “a dietary ingredient that was not marketed in the United States in
a dietary supplement before October 15, 1994.”20 Furthermore,
a dietary supplement is considered adulterated under the law unless all dietary
ingredients were present in the food supply or the manufacturer provides “evidence
of safety” when the supplement is used as labeled. Dietary supplements with
“structure/function” claims require additional, undefined “substantiation that
the claim is truthful and not misleading.”20 “I
think the question is, is it chemically altered from what was in commerce
before?” asked Dr. Fabricant in an interview with HerbalEGram. “To extract that compound in any sort
of quantity, did you have to treat the material…or did you have to use a
specific solvent that would really underscore a chemical change, a chemical
alteration?” Dr.
Fabricant noted that the FDA pays particular attention to dietary supplement
claims. “If there are products advertising this wonderful effect, like a drug,
that’s where we tend to get very interested,” he said. And substantiation of
such claims, he says, should be based on human data. “If you’re not doing it in
a human study, how is it exactly that you are substantiating the claim?”
In a May 2013 blog
entry,21 Driven Sports wrote that three human safety studies
examining the effects of acute and chronic use of Craze had been completed and published
results were “expected soon.” As of October, a representative from Driven
Sports told HerbalEGram an additional study had been completed and that all
four were submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals (Driven Sports
email to T. Smith, October 1, 2013). As of December 3, 2013, the studies —
conducted by the Ohio-based contract research organization The Center for
Applied Health Sciences — have not been published. Natural, Plant-Sourced
Constituents? One
particularly contentious issue associated with DMAA was whether or not the
chemical existed naturally in any species in the genus Pelargonium, or in any other plant. As noted, credible published
analyses of sports supplements containing DMAA as well as verified plant
material and oil from plants in the genus Pelargonium
have demonstrated DMAA is synthetic and is not found naturally in any
plant. Similarly, some of the ingredients found in Craze, particularly N,α-DEPEA, are clearly synthetic, according to the
authoritative experts consulted for this article. N,α-DEPEA “is not listed on the Craze
label (although, as shown above, it has been found in Craze), nor has it ever
been identified in any plant (including dendrobium),” Cohen et al. explained in
their recent paper.1 As
president and CEO of the sports supplement company Genr8, Anthony Almada wryly
explained, “Let’s follow you to your orchid factory where you grow them in a
hot house then watch as you take the stems of the orchids…and put them through
your extraction machinery and equipment and out the other end comes a
high-purity…extract,” he said (oral communication, July 2, 2013). “They [the
suppliers of so-called dendrobium extracts found in sports supplements] don’t
do that.” However,
even if all of the components of Dendrobex were found naturally in plants, the
low yields of such compounds would prevent any manufacturer from using actual,
dendrobium-derived sources. “If
you start doing the economic botany calculations, it [would] be an unfathomable
undertaking to create [pure dendrobium-derived compounds] in the amounts that
are being put into these products,” Almada said. “It [would] be prohibitively
expensive.”
Despite the economic
unfeasibility, Driven Sports maintains its claim of pure, plant-sourced dendrobium.
“Our dendrobium extract is not synthetic or a ‘synthetic botanical,’” a company
representative wrote in an email to HerbalEGram (Driven Sports email to T.
Smith, October 1, 2013). “It’s an all natural extract of dendrobium.”
Descendants of
DMAA: The Trend Continues On
the surface, the controversy over “dendrobium extract”-containing supplements
such as Craze is strikingly similar to that of DMAA: (1) a discredited sports
supplement figure introduces as a dietary ingredient a compound originally of
pharmaceutical interest; (2) USADA adds questionable products to its Dietary
Supplements High Risk list based on WADA restrictions; (3) ingredient in
question receives international media attention; and (4) researchers attempt to
determine product’s contents, origin, and/or human health effects. Fortunately,
serious adverse effects — such as the multiple deaths associated with DMAA —
have not yet surfaced for supplements that allegedly contain dendrobium extract. A
Freedom of Information Act request by USA
Today uncovered one report from November 2012 of a 15-year-old boy found
“unconscious and unresponsive” after ingesting Craze,3 but as with
adverse event reports in general, the product in question has only a
correlational — not causal — link to the incident. One
lawsuit filed against Driven Sports in 2012 was dismissed in February 2013
after the plaintiffs failed to provide evidence that Craze was unlawfully adulterated
with amphetamine,22 but a new class-action lawsuit was filed in
California four days after the publication of Cohen et al.’s paper alleging that
the company marketed and sold products containing an unlabeled chemical
“similar to the illicit street drug methamphetamine.”23 On
October 15, 2013 — just one day after the reports of N,α-DEPEA in various Craze samples were published —
Driven Sports revealed on its blog that the company had voluntarily halted
production and sales of the popular supplement sometime in the past “several
months.”14 The
unfolding story of Craze — one fraught with public skepticism, dubious manufacturer
claims, potential regulatory concerns,
and nuanced analytical findings — in some ways epitomizes the complexities and
controversies that exist in the dietary supplements industry at large. How the
Craze controversy will end remains to be seen. “It would not surprise me to see dendrobium
go the way of DMAA and to see another ingredient rise up to take dendrobium’s
place,” said New Hope’s Marc Brush. “Given the pattern, the botanicals sector
seems a likely source of candidates for the next heir apparent.” Despite the past frustration, some, like
Brush, see reason for cautious optimism. “DMAA set a precedent, after much
handwringing by the [responsible elements of the] industry over how to
effectively self-police when faced with such a popular bad actor, and that
precedent will effect more rapid purging in the years to come of any ‘new
DMAAs,’” Brush said. “Given the heightened attention from media and regulators,
I don’t believe the market opportunity remains as great for descendants of
DMAA.”
—Tyler Smith
References
- Cohen
PA, Travis JC, Venhuis BJ. A methamphetamine analog (N,α-diethyl-phenylethylamine)
identified in a mainstream dietary supplement. Drug Test Analysis; 2013. doi: 10.1002/dta.1578.
- Lee J, Venhuis
BJ, Heo S, Choi H, Seol I, Kim E. Identification and quantitation of N,α-diethylphenethylamine
in preworkout supplements sold via the Internet. Forensic Toxicology; 2013. doi: 10.1007/s11419-013-0205-6.
- Young
A. Sports supplement designer has history of risky products. USA Today. July 27, 2013. Available here. Accessed August 4, 2013.
- Craze: product description. Driven Sports website. Available here. Accessed August 4, 2013.
- Link
C. Meet DMAA’s replacement. NewHope360 website. Available here. Accessed November 24, 2013.
- DMAA
in dietary supplements. FDA website. Available here. Accessed November 24, 2013.
- Smith T. New research suggests synthetic origin of DMAA in supplements. HerbalGram. 2012;95:46-49. Available here.
- Assaei
S. The new ephedra? ESPN website. Available here. Accessed September 28, 2013.
- Statement regarding media attention on Craze from 10-15-13. Driven Sports
website. Available here. Accessed October 15, 2013.
- Young
A. Maker of Craze suspends production of sports supplement. USA Today. October
16, 2013. Available here. Accessed October 16, 2013.
- Dietary Supplement High Risk List. USADA website. Available here. Accessed November 20, 2013.
- Starling
S. UPDATE: Swedish agency detects (legal) amphetamine-like compounds in sports
supplements; not in ‘authentic’ Craze, says manufacturer. NutraIngredients
website. Available here. Accessed July 14, 2013.
- More craziness over Craze. Patrick Arnold website. Available here. Accessed July 14, 2013.
- Further
proof that Craze does not contain amphetamines. Driven Sports website.
Available here. Accessed June 15, 2013.
- Statement about USA Today article from 7-25-13. Driven Sports website.
Available here. Accessed July 28, 2013.
- Mass
spectrometry. Michigan State University website. Available here. at:.
Accessed November 25, 2013.
- §813: Treatment of controlled substance analogues. Office of Diversion Control
website. Available here. November 24, 2013.
- List
of controlled substances. Office of Diversion Control website. Available here. Accessed November 24, 2013.
- Young A. Meth-like compound in sports supplement could be a crime. USA Today.
Available here. Accessed October 20, 2013.
- Published
safety studies for Craze expected soon. Driven Sports website. Available here. Accessed
December 2, 2013.
- Baseless
lawsuit against Craze dismissed. Driven Sports website. Available here. Accessed September 27, 2013.
- Class Action Lawsuit Alleges Driven Sports’ Pre-Workout Supplement ‘Craze’
Includes Chemical Cousin to Methamphetamine [press release]. New York, NY:
Parker Waichman LLC; October 18, 2012. Available here. Accessed November 25, 2013.
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