I don't know if that is possible. My only area of expertise is advertising and I do pay attention to all the crazy supplements that are advertised on talk radio. Most do not make any specific claims and most, if I have listened well, are not synthesized. Many say "natural." There is one whose main ingredient is a species of venus flytrap and which constantly makes the claim that Ronald Reagan had it brought to the White House in 1985. They have a commercial now that references this and twice mention that he did it to treat "colon (quick edit)" It's obvious that they produced the spot with the announcer saying, "colon cancer" and it's possible that an attorney or even the show on which the ad ran told them they cannot make any claims about it curing specific disease. So did RCPI begin treating anatabine a a drug connecting it to certain diseases and, so, trigger an almost automatic response from the FDA? I don't know. Actually, it is frustrating to me that so many of these male products and other supplements can make the claims they do which are usually not proven and soemtimes there is evidence that they do NOT work, and anatabine, which seemed helpful to hundreds, is not available.