The Morning Call

FDA needs to get to the root of hair-straighten­er carcinogen­s

- By F.D. Flam F.D. Flam is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering science. She is host of the “Follow the Science” podcast.

In 2020, after a couple of months of letting my hair grow during the pandemic, my hairdresse­r suggested my longer tresses could be smoother and easier to style if I got what’s called a keratin treatment. I could say goodbye to fighting cowlicks and humid-weather frizz and hello to effortless­ly polished, profession­al-looking hair.

This fall, the Food and Drug Administra­tion announced that several common treatments used to smooth, straighten or relax hair — including many keratin treatments — contain formaldehy­de, a known carcinogen. At first I thought the treatments I’ve had probably didn’t fall into this category — though after doing some research, I’m not so sure.

The FDA could ban these products as early as 2024. But a ban on formaldehy­de may not go far enough since a new study suggests a different class of products might pose a bigger risk to consumers.

Our bodies can handle the tiny amounts of formaldehy­de that we often encounter as a preservati­ve in personal care products. But during the blow-drying and straight-ironing parts of the treatment, it’s hard to avoid inhaling the stuff — which makes it more dangerous. And to make matters worse, some products are being deceptivel­y marketed as formaldehy­de-free even though they contain glycolic acid, which becomes formaldehy­de when heated — and hair treatments almost always involve using heat.

The risk isn’t only to consumers — it’s even more pronounced for the stylists who routinely work with these toxic chemicals.

Chemist Erika Milczek has also gotten keratin treatments. She told me she wasn’t particular­ly worried that a single exposure would harm her, but knew her hairdresse­r was getting repeated exposures. “She hadn’t been told that she was smearing formaldehy­de on my head, vaporizing it at 400 degrees and inhaling it.”

And formaldehy­de isn’t the only dangerous chemical lurking in hair salons. An alarming 2022 study showed a 2.5-fold increase in the risk of uterine cancer associated with frequent use of any hair straighten­ers, smoothers or relaxers. The study hinted that the products with formaldehy­de might not be the main culprits.

That study followed more than 30,000 women for over a decade. While the average woman has a 1.64% chance of developing uterine cancer by age 70, frequent use of hair straighten­ers, smoothers or relaxers raised this to 4%. Black women are much more likely to get these treatments frequently — more than four times a year. (The study found no risk associated with hair dye, perms or body waves.)

The study pointed out that frequent users are often getting treated with a different class of products that rely on lye (sodium hydroxide) or similarly harsh chemicals that can burn the scalp. The irritation would make the skin more permeable to endocrine-disrupting chemicals, which are often contained in these products.

That mechanism has been suggested in previous studies associatin­g these products with cancer. These products are often referred to as relaxers rather than straighten­ers, and are more likely to be used in home treatments and marketed to Black women.

So the FDA may be dealing with two different problems — a class of frequently used hair products that are linked to cancer in consumers, and another class of formaldehy­de-containing products that are posing a risk to salon workers.

Milczek said when chemists are working with formaldehy­de in a lab, they always work in a vented hood with safety glasses, a lab coat and gloves. Her hairdresse­r was taking none of those precaution­s. In 2017, she left a job at Merck to start her own business, CurieCo, which develops biological molecules called enzymes to replace risky or banned chemical ingredient­s in cosmetics and personal care products. She was inspired, in part, by her experience at that salon.

Milczek explained that the formaldehy­de is what bonds the new keratin proteins into the hair. Straighten­ing with a flat iron forms covalent bonds that keep the hair straight long-term. That glue-like property is one reason you don’t want to inhale formaldehy­de. It is, as chemists put it, promiscuou­s — it can also get into cells and wreak havoc.

When I called the FDA, I couldn’t get any explanatio­n for why these products hadn’t been banned years ago. Mark Jones, a former industrial chemist who now works as a consultant, notes that the agency has known about the formaldehy­de problem for more than a decade. They even sent warning letters to a major manufactur­er way back in 2011 — but nothing changed. It’s past time to rectify this mistake.

We don’t necessaril­y need to give up on frizz-taming treatments. There are other smoothing and straighten­ing treatments that are likely to be safer. One is thioglycol­ic acid treatment, also known as the Japanese method. There’s also a treatment called hair Botox, which doesn’t contain either formaldehy­de or lye (or the actual botulism toxin used in the popular in skin-smoothing treatment). Hairdresse­rs who are worried about the risk — or feel sick after using formaldehy­de products, as mine said she did — could switch to these.

But still, the stuff with formaldehy­de should be taken off the market, and only the FDA can make that happen. Recent monitoring by OSHA revealed that some salons exceed safe limits of formaldehy­de in the air. But OSHA doesn’t have the power to ban a product or even require warnings. The FDA does.

 ?? ANDREW A. NELLES/ FOR CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? A 2022 study followed more than 30,000 women for over a decade. While the average woman has a 1.64% chance of developing uterine cancer by age 70, frequent use of hair straighten­ers, smoothers or relaxers raised this to 4%. The study found no risk associated with hair dye, perms or body waves.
ANDREW A. NELLES/ FOR CHICAGO TRIBUNE A 2022 study followed more than 30,000 women for over a decade. While the average woman has a 1.64% chance of developing uterine cancer by age 70, frequent use of hair straighten­ers, smoothers or relaxers raised this to 4%. The study found no risk associated with hair dye, perms or body waves.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States