ACKRELL CAPITAL Cannabis Investment Report | December 2017 introduction into interstate commerce” of any drug, medical device, food, tobacco product or cosmetic undertaken without the required FDA approval, permit or registration. An article that includes cannabis or a cannabis derivative could conceivably qualify as a drug, medi- cal device, food, tobacco product or cosmetic (or a combination). For example, a skin lubricant infused with cannabis extract and intended to relieve muscle pain may be both a cosmetic and a drug, and a prefilled device used to administer a metered dose of vaporized THC for treating nausea may be both a medical device and a drug. Industry dialogue regarding the FD&C Act and the FDA tends to focus on cannabinoid-based drugs and the potential for certain cannabis products to be regulated as food or a related category of products known as “dietary supplements,” and we expand on both topics in the following discussion. Drugs Generally, the FD&C Act defines a “drug” as any one of the following: (i) Any article recognized in the official U.S. Pharmacopoeia, U.S. Homeopathic Pharma- copoeia or National Formulary. (ii) Any article intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment or prevention of disease in humans or animals. (iii) Any article (other than food) intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of humans or animals. (iv) Any article intended as a component of any of the foregoing. The FDA oversees the manufacturing of drugs by inspecting domestic and foreign manufacturing plants, by sampling drugs from retail stores, distribution warehouses and manufacturing plants and by evaluating complaints and reports of defects from consumers and health care professionals. The FD&C Act generally prohibits a company from introducing a drug into interstate commerce without the FDA having first approved the drug as safe and effective for treating a specified medical condition. FDA approval of a drug as safe and effec