- FDA’s Human Foods Program has released an updated list of priority research, data, and method needs to support food safety and nutrition oversight. While aimed at researchers, the agenda also offers industry insight into scientific research likely to influence future regulatory decisions for foods, beverages, dietary supplements, and food contact materials.
- The priorities span nutrition, consumer behavior, microbiological and chemical safety, and risk assessment. FDA highlights needs related to nutrient intake and bioavailability, infant and child nutrition, ultra‑processed foods, consumer understanding of labeling and additives, pathogen detection and prevention, and improved methods for assessing emerging chemical risks.
- Human behavior research features include consumer interpretation of allergen labeling, perceptions of food chemicals and additives, responses to novel food ingredients, and changes in purchasing or consumption behavior following labeling or policy interventions.
- From a food safety perspective, the priorities reinforce FDA’s ongoing emphasis on prevention, detection, and root‑cause analysis. Microbiological research needs focus on pathogen prevalence, survival under real‑world processing and retail conditions, effectiveness of sanitation and processing controls, and expanded use of genomic and geospatial tools to support outbreak investigations and environmental monitoring. Similarly, chemical safety priorities emphasize improved detection methods, targeted surveillance of known and emerging hazards, and development of novel testing approaches, such as new approach methodologies (NAMs), to assess safety where traditional data may be limited.
- Keller and Heckman will continue to monitor developments related to FDA’s Human Foods Program research priorities and their potential implications for food and dietary supplement stakeholders.