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Cancer: The
Health Risk Behind the Cosmeceutical Mask
CHICAGO, IL, October 6, 2009
--/WORLD-WIRE/--
Anti-aging skin products are known as
cosmeceuticals, as they overlap the
distinction between cosmetics and
pharmaceuticals. These products are the
fastest growing sales sector of the entire
cosmetics industry, and are widely marketed
as being safe. But Cancer Prevention
Coalition Chairman Dr. Samuel S. Epstein
warns that altering the physical structure
of skin with chemicals to look more youthful
comes at a hidden price to the skin, and
even more so to overall health.
The term cosmeceutical, applied to
anti-wrinkle and anti-aging creams, was
first adopted by the cosmetics industry in
1984. It was developed as a way to avoid
subjecting the industry’s claims to the
authority of the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA). The idea was to create
a new category of products that did more
than just improve the appearance of the
skin, yet do somewhat less than
pharmaceutical drugs.
But Dr. Epstein wants to alert consumers to
the dangers of cosmeceuticals, including the
increased risk of skin cancer.
In addition, he is urging the new FDA
Commissioner Margaret Hamburg, M.D. to take
“appropriate regulatory action to protect
the unsuspecting public from the dangers of
cosmeceuticals.”
Here is what we know of the overwhelming
majority of cosmeceuticals, says Dr.
Epstein, based on toxicology and clinical
testing.
To increase the permeability of skin,
hydroxy acids are widely sold on store
shelves and used in cosmetic salons. Both
alpha-hydroxy acids (AHA), and beta-hydroxy
acids (BHA) are common ingredients in
cosmeceuticals.
Worse still, Dr. Epstein warns, AHAs are
used in an estimated 5 percent of all
products without any labeling to this
effect.
Even the industry’s Cosmetics Ingredient
Review Compendium has admitted that these
ingredients strip the skin of its protective
surface, which absorbs long-wave ultraviolet
radiation from sunlight and tanning salons.
Apart from increased risks of sunburn,
exposure to AHAs also increases risks of a
dangerous skin cancer, known as malignant
melanoma. Although it is one of the less
common types of skin cancer, malignant
melanoma is responsible for roughly 75
percent of all skin cancer-related deaths.
Reacting to these concerns, in 1992 the FDA
issued a consumer warning that products
containing these ingredients “could destroy
the upper layers of skin, causing severe
burns, swelling and pain.” However, the FDA
took no regulatory action to protect
consumers, and the agency still has taken no
regulatory action, Dr. Epstein points out.
Bisabolol is another cosmeceutical
ingredient which strips off the surface
layers of skin. This chemical is also a
penetration enhancer, meaning that it
increases the absorption of cosmeceutical
ingredients through the skin.
Limonene is also a common ingredient in
anti-aging products. “Apart from being an
irritant, it is a well documented
carcinogen,” says Dr. Epstein.
Parabens are commonly added to
cosmeceuticals as preservatives. However,
Dr. Epstein cautions consumers that even
when tested at low concentrations on the
skin of pregnant rodents, parabens induce
toxic hormonal effects in male embryos and
infants.
“Nano-particles are more recent and
ultra-dangerous ingredients in
cosmeceuticals, particularly anti-wrinkle
creams,” warns Dr. Epstein. “By reducing the
size of ingredients to the ultra-microscopic
scale, they penetrate readily and deeply
through the skin into the blood and organs
all over the body.”
“Ninety percent of all cosmetics sold in the
world today are probably cosmeceuticals,”
says Dr. Albert Kligman, the dermatologist
who first coined the term, in a 2005
interview with the journal Dermatologic
Surgery.
“The terminology regarding the distinction
between cosmetics and drugs is a marketing
game in the U.S.," Kilgman said. "If you
reverse aging, you are a drug. If you smooth
skin, you are a cosmetic. Categorization
depends more on the language on the bottle
rather than the product in the bottle.”
Dr. Epstein says, “These statements raise
troubling concerns regarding the identity
and safety of ingredients in cosmeceutical
products. So many women, and even some men,
slather these products all over their skin,
the largest body organ, in the naïve belief
that they have nothing to fear but aging.”
“The industry markets cosmeceuticals with
anecdotal or even wild claims of
effectiveness, rather than scientific data,
and with reckless disregard for safety,” Dr.
Epstein cautions.
He points to a 2007 warning from the
respected Mayo Clinic that cosmeceuticals
have rarely been tested for safety, and also
that they may contain “powerful active
ingredients that can affect biological
processes.”
Cosmeceutical manufacturers “make a
calculated decision not to make claims that
will result in scrutiny by the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration of the product as a
drug,” stated Dr. Mary P. Lupo of the Tulane
University School of Medicine in a 2005
issue of Dermatologic Surgery. “Clinical
testing could also draw the attention of the
FDA, so some manufacturers opt instead to
allow the consumer arena to become the test
market.”
“So there you have it!” Dr. Epstein says,
“People who use cosmeceuticals are guinea
pigs in reckless and self-serving industry
experiments to test whether these products
are safe for human health. This should be a
loud siren wakeup warning for anyone who
still believes that these products have been
tested for toxicity by the industry, and
approved by the FDA.”
In spite of these disturbing concerns,
dermatologist Dr. Nicholas Perricone, author
of three New York Times best selling books,
is an active proponent of a “Men’s Skin Care
Line,” his patented product based on
nanoparticles.
Apart from the ineffectiveness of the great
majority of cosmeceutical products, most are
highly priced. In 2006, Consumer Reports
magazine evaluated anti-wrinkle creams on
the market, and concluded there was no
correlation between price and possible
effectiveness. “The best advice is prevent
those wrinkles in the first place,” read the
review. “Stay out of the sun and don’t
smoke.”
Dr. Epstein says that the cosmeceutical
product Restylane is an exception to his
warnings. “This Swedish anti-wrinkling agent
is based on the natural ingredient
hyaluronic acid, one of the very few
scientifically proven safe and effective
cosmeceuticals,” he says.
Besides Botox injections, which have been on
the market long enough to be accepted as
safe, there are emerging green alternatives
to the wide range of conventional anti-aging
products now on store shelves.
Dr. Epstein says these include natural
botanicals, such as date palm oil, which
have been found to be safe and effective for
certain types of wrinkles, and topical green
tea cream, which has proven effective for
treating sun damaged skin.
Dr. Epstein anticipates that Dr. Hamburg,
the highly respected new FDA Commissioner,
will take appropriate regulatory action to
protect the unsuspecting public from the
dangers of cosmeceuticals.
Samuel S. Epstein, M.D. is professor
emeritus of Environmental and Occupational
Medicine at the University of Illinois at
Chicago School of Public Health; Chairman of
the Cancer Prevention Coalition; The Albert
Schweitzer Golden Grand Medalist for
International Contributions to Cancer
Prevention; and author of over 200
scientific articles and 15 books on cancer,
including the groundbreaking The Politics of
Cancer (1979), and Toxic Beauty (2009).
CONTACT:
Samuel S. Epstein, MD
Professor emeritus Environmental &
Occupational Medicine
University of Illinois at Chicago School of
Public Health
Chairman, Cancer Prevention Coalition
Chicago, Illinois
epstein@uic.edu
www.preventcancer.com
312-996-2297
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