Iran Daily

US FDA proposes new regulation­s for over-the-counter sunscreens

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The US Food and Drug Administra­tion said two of the 16 currently used main chemical ingredient­s in over-the-counter sunscreen products are considered safe, as part of a proposal here aimed at improving the safety and quality of sunscreen products sold without prescripti­on in the US.

The agency named two ingredient­s — PABA and trolamine salicylate — as not permitted for use in non-prescripti­on sunscreen products, adding that it is asking the industry for additional data on 12 other ingredient­s, Reuters wrote.

The health regulator said the proposed rule has been issued to establish conditions under which some sunscreen drug products can be sold without Fda-approved marketing applicatio­ns.

The agency proposed that of the 16 currently used ingredient­s, only two — zinc oxide and titanium dioxide — are considered safe and effective based on available data.

In November 2016, the FDA had issued here guidelines detailing the data that makers of over-the-counter sunscreens need to produce to prove the ingredient­s in the products are safe and effective.

“Broad spectrum sunscreens with SPF values of at least 15 are critical to the arsenal of tools for preventing skin cancer and protecting the skin from damage caused by the sun’s rays, yet some of the essential requiremen­ts for these preventive tools haven’t been updated in decades,” FDA Commission­er said.

Among other measures, the agency also plans to raise the maximum proposed sun protection factor or SPF value on sunscreen labels from SPF 50+ to SPF 60+.

SPF is a measure of the extent of protection a product offers against the ultraviole­t radiation in sun rays that is generally considered harmful.

Environmen­tal Working Group (EWG), a nonpro¿t health and environmen­tal advocacy group, called the proposal a “big step toward cleaning up a largely unregulate­d industry”.

“We expect many companies to quickly reformulat­e to avoid those ingredient­s that the FDA considers unsafe or for which there is not enough data to prove safety,” Scott Faber of EWG said on a press call after FDA’S announceme­nt. Scott Gottlieb

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