Chemical connected to cancer found in popular acne creams
Proactiv, Target's Up & Up and Clinique found with elevated levels of benzene, a study finds
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 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 in high amounts, according to the U.S. Centers 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 cabinets 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 Defense, to test drugs used by their members and weed out substandard treatments.
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 9 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.
Representatives for the FDA, Taro Pharmaceuticals, Target, Estee Lauder and Reckitt didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
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 totaled $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 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.”