The U.S. Supreme Court has settled its fate and denied a petition for a writ of certiorari filed by a supplement manufacturer Hi-Tech Pharmaceuticals and its owner, Jared Wheat. The nation’s highest court has rejected a request to review a case involving the legality of DMAA (1,3-dimethylamylamine), a once-prevalent ingredient marketed in sports supplements.

The decision brings to a close seven years of litigation, leaving in place a 2019 ruling by an appeals court, which held DMAA does not belong in supplements. FDA describes DMAA as an “amphetamine derivative” that can pose health risks to consumers, especially when used in combination with other stimulants like caffeine.

Previous director of the FDA’s Division of Dietary Supplements Programs said, no manufacturer demonstrated to FDA the safety of DMAA through a new dietary ingredient notification (NDIN) — a requirement of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 (DSHEA).

Although Hi-Tech did not receive a warning letter in 2012, FDA seized DMAA-containing products from the supplement manufacturer in 2013. That triggered a seven-year-old legal battle between the Georgia-based company and federal government.

While Wheat acknowledged DMAA used in his supplements was synthetically produced, Hi-Tech presented evidence to show the ingredient comes from geranium plants. But ultimately, a federal district court ruled—and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit concurred—that DMAA does not meet the definition of a dietary ingredient in DSHEA.

“[I]t is unlikely that Congress used the term ‘constituent’ to mean a substance that is present in a plant in only trace amounts and that has never been derived from a plant for use in any medicinal, cosmetic or dietary product,” said U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle.

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