Carcinogens in some familiar Acne products.
I have reposted this report published in Time Magazine 2024 to alert all to the ongoing potential of danger in the personal care market. A subject I feel very strongly about.
There are some very well-known brands implicated here. It highlights that in many markets, the manufacturer is solely responsible for the safety of their products with no independent 3rd party assessment. This is akin to putting a child in charge of regulation in a lolly shop. The personal care market is HUGE financially and is an open and global market.
In Australia, the TGA reviews and regulates claims made on manufacturers labels. If you compound, quality and ethically produced product is manufactured in Good Medical Practice (GMP) accredited facilities. Ingredients are researched and selected for not only their effectiveness but their compatibility with human biology to ensure both safety and legal compliance. I am aware of this as I proudly compound a skin care range that has been meticulously crafted, modified and enhanced over time, GMP manufactured and passed TGA review.
In Australia, the market contains imports that escape our guidelines and reply on the integrity of the manufacturer to protect you and create a “safe” product. In a highly competitive and heavily marketed sector, profits can outstrip ethics very easily with humanity potentially paying the long-term price.
American data suggests the average adult applies 16 personal care products to their body daily. An average of 168 chemicals being applied to absorptive membranes. Some contain carcinogens and are worn all day.
Please remember that what you put on your skin every day bio accumulates, meaning little bit by bit the ingredients build up in your tissues. Absorption takes time and some ingredients will be recognised as nutritive others chemical or foreign. The challenge is that the non nutritive can engorge lymphatic clearance channels, damage organs, and interfere with a healthy cellular signalling across many systems. Your natural 3 phase detoxification pathways do their best job at keeping you clean but they often get overwhelmed, particularly if the body is already under chronic stress with adrenal fatigue or an already high toxic burden.
In the EU, it is reported that there are 1100 personal care products banned, in Australia and USA approximately < 20.
I always caution about “Green washing “ the practice of making enticing and unsubstantiated marketing claims about supposedly safe and health promoting products. It has become prolific across social media.
For example, Sodium Laurel Sulphate (SLS) is littered throughout our personal care products in Australia, it is banned in Europe as it reportedly causes cancer in rats. Formaldehyde is another known carcinogen in the global personal care market.
Recently I was bombarded online with what looked like an unbelievable cream to instantly remove pesky under eye bags, literally while you watched, only to find on investigation that one of its most active ingredients was silicone !.
Again, reading labels is a very healthy habit.
Considering the longevity of some of these chemicals once exposed, you owe it to, if not yourself your unborn children and grandchildren to be very aware of these risks.
From Time Magazine. March 7th 2024
Hand sanitizers were tainted by benzene. Sunscreens and dry shampoos too. Now acne treatments are joining the list of widely used consumer products found to contain high levels of the chemical linked to cancer.
Acne products from brands including Proactiv, Target Corp.’s Up & Up and Clinique have elevated levels of the carcinogen, an independent testing laboratory said in a petition (1) filed with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration late Tuesday. The lab asked the FDA to recall the affected treatments—all of which contain the active ingredient benzoyl peroxide—while regulators investigate.
Benzene is a natural component of gasoline and tobacco smoke and can cause leukemia (2) in high amounts, according to the U.S. Centre for Disease Control and Prevention. Over the past three years it’s been detected in several popular products, heightening consumers’ awareness of the potential threats in their bathroom cabinet, and raising questions about the FDA’s oversight of the industry.
Companies including Johnson & Johnson, Unilever Plc and Procter & Gamble Co. have recalled products.
New Haven, Connecticut-based Valisure LLC, the testing laboratory that filed Tuesday’s petition and uncovered the previous risks, has positioned itself as a gatekeeper for consumers. Valisure gained prominence conducting product research and has deals with large health-care systems, including Kaiser Permanente and the U.S. Department of Defence, to test drugs used by their members and weed out substandard treatments.
The FDA said the agency would work to verify whether Valisure’s data is accurate before acting on the lab’s petition. “The agency will continue to provide updates to the public regarding benzene in drug products, as appropriate,” Jeremy Kahn, a spokesperson for the FDA said in a statement.
Companies are required to ensure the safety of their products, he said.
For its acne research, Valisure tested 66 benzoyl peroxide products, including creams, lotions, gels and washes available either over the counter from major retailers or via prescription. While FDA guidelines allow up to 2 parts per million of benzene, Valisure found up to nine times that amount in some treatments. Those levels jumped significantly when the products were tested at higher temperatures designed to replicate how they might break down over time, for example if stored in a medicine cabinet in a steamy bathroom.
Proactiv’s 2.5% benzoyl peroxide cream, manufactured by Taro Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., contained as much as 1,761 parts per million of benzene during Valisure’s stability testing, while a similar cream from Target reached 1,598 parts per million and a treatment from Estee Lauder Cos.’s Clinique hit 401 parts per million.
A 10% benzoyl peroxide cream from Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc’s Clearasil initially tested just at the FDA limit but jumped to 308 parts per million of benzene after being exposed to high temperatures for more than two weeks.
“Reckitt is confident that all Clearasil products, when used and stored as directed on their labels, are safe,” the company said in a statement. The safety and quality of products are its top priority, Reckitt said. It didn’t answer questions about whether it had tested its acne cream for benzene.
Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. said it’s reviewing Valisure’s petition. “We work with our suppliers to follow FDA regulations and guidelines for Walgreens branded products,” the company said in a statement.
Representatives for Taro Pharmaceuticals and Estee Lauder didn’t respond to requests for comment. Target declined to comment.
Reckitt fell 2% and Unilever dipped 0.4% in London, while Estee Lauder slid 1.3% and Taro tumbled 2.4% at the close in New York.
Acne is the most common skin condition in the U.S. and affects as many as 50 million people each year, according to the American Academy of Dermatology. The numbers are even higher among teenagers and young adults: about 85% of those aged 12 to 24 have some form of the condition.
Sales of over-the-counter U.S. acne treatments totalled $1 billion last year, almost double the $593 million in sales in 2019, data from Chicago-based market research firm Circana showed. The AAD guidelines name benzoyl peroxide as one of its top recommendations (3) for treating acne topically.
Valisure President David Light said the contamination happens because benzoyl peroxide can break down and form benzene.
“This has been well known for a long time,” he said in an interview. “All that was needed was for someone to check on it.”
Light is listed as an inventor on a patent (4) filed last year for a method to prevent benzoyl peroxide from breaking down into benzene in drug products. The lab tested other kinds of acne products with different ingredients, mainly salicylic acid, and did not find elevated benzene levels in those.
Valisure’s most high-profile investigation was into heartburn drug Zantac, which the FDA pulled from the market along with generic versions in 2020, months after the lab discovered the drug’s active ingredient—ranitidine—could form a probable carcinogen called NDMA.
The FDA has questioned Valisure’s testing methods in the past. Specifically, the agency has said the independent lab should follow the same process that drug manufacturers use, which tends to be costlier than the way that Valisure tests.
Valisure stands behind its testing methods and points to its certification from the International Organization for Standardization, which sets testing guidelines for all kinds of products including drugs. In a statement Wednesday, Valisure said the results from its research on acne treatments were most similar to its investigation into those ranitidine products.
“The benzene we found in sunscreens and other consumer products were impurities that came from contaminated ingredients; however, the benzene in benzoyl peroxide products is coming from the benzoyl peroxide itself,” Light said in the statement.
In 2022, following Valisure’s previous benzene findings, the FDA warned companies (5) that they should assess the risk of the chemical forming in their own products. The agency doesn’t regularly test products it oversees.
“The discovery made by Valisure regarding benzoyl peroxide acne treatment products is deeply troubling and gives renewed importance to the need to empower the FDA to immediately act once we are made aware of the dangers of prescription or over-the-counter drugs,” U.S. Representative Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, said in a statement. “Benzoyl peroxide products saturate the current market and millions of consumers are unknowingly using a product that increases their exposure to life-threatening carcinogens.”
DeLauro has attempted to push legislation that would give the FDA the authority to recall drugs rather than negotiate with companies to do so on a voluntary basis.
Valisure’s testing also examined benzene in the air surrounding acne treatments and found that even an unopened Proactiv product leaked high levels when kept at 104 degrees Fahrenheit, the temperature of a hot shower, for almost 17 hours. The Environmental Protection Agency has said inhaling benzene at levels of 0.4 parts per billion chronically over a lifetime could result in one additional cancer per 100,000 people, a measure of risk the FDA also uses.
References
https://assets-global.website-files.com/6215052733f8bb8fea016220/65e8560962ed23f744902a7b_Valisure%20Citizen%20Petition%20on%20Benzene%20in%20Benzoyl%20Peroxide%20Drug%20Products.pdf
https://emergency.cdc.gov/agent/benzene/basics/facts.asp
https://www.jaad.org/article/S0190-9622(23)03389-3/fulltext
https://patents.google.com/patent/WO2023177625A1/en?inventor=%22david+light%22&oq=inventor:+%22david+light%22&sort=new
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/pharmaceutical-quality-resources/fda-alerts-drug-manufacturers-risk-benzene-contamination-certain-drugs