Heat on over safety of Aussie sunscreens
SUNSCREENS sold in Australia will be tested after US studies found they contained two cancer-causing chemicals, Australia’s leading medical regulator has confirmed.
The Therapeutic Goods Administration said it was investigating whether the products sold across the country contained two carcinogenic substances, benzene and benzophenone.
“The TGA is currently investigating this issue and is conducting testing of samples of sunscreen products containing benzene as well as products containing octocrylene for the presence of benzophenone and compliance with existing standards,” a spokesman said.
“The results of this testing will be published on the TGA website when available.”
In June, US company Valisure tested generic medicines for purity and found nearly 80 sunscreens, including popular brands similar to those sold in Australia, contained benzene.
Then another US laboratory found other sunscreens that contained the permitted ingredient octocrylene had another carcinogen – benzophenone.
Over time, octocrylene degraded and produced benzophenone, the study found.
The TGA said it regularly conducted laboratory testing and reviewed the safety of Australian sunscreens.
“However, we have not regularly tested for carcinogens,” the medical regulator said.
US chemical testing laboratory Haereticus Environmental Laboratory wrote to the US medicines regulator the US Food and Drugs Administration asking it to pull all sunscreens that contained octocrylene.
The laboratory claimed an anti-ageing cream ingredient, octocrylene, contained in sunscreen degraded into a toxic chemical – benzophenone – a known carcinogen.
The presence of benzophenone in food products or food packaging is banned in the US.
But octocrylene has been approved for use in sunscreens, moisturisers, lip balms, and anti-ageing products in the US.
Brands tested in the scientific research and found to contain the chemical included Coppertone, Banana Boat, Neutrogena, Garnier, LaRoche and L’Oreal.
Cancer Council Victoria head of prevention Craig Sinclair said sunscreens sold in Australia that contained octocrylene had met the TGA’s “stringent requirements”.