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June 1, 2015
By: Nadim Shaath
Recent developments with the FDA and the Sunscreen Innovation Act (SIA) have cast a shadow on the filter approval process in the US. In case you missed it, the FDA has basically rejected the call to speed up the approvals of the Time and Extent Applications (TEA) of the eight pending ultraviolet filters. A process that was supposed to take a maximum of one year has now been extended to over a dozen years, and there is no end in sight.1 In an article in the Washington Post on May 11, 2015 entitled “Why the newest sunscreens still haven’t hit the US market?” Reporter Brady Dennis quotes Senator Johnny Isakson (R-GA), a principal backer of the SIA, as saying, “It’s going way too slow. I’m very disappointed.” It’s not the first time that Isakson voiced frustration over the SIA. He asked the agency’s then-commissioner, Margaret Hamburg, “Can you tell me why the FDA is so reluctant to follow through on what Congress passed in the Sunscreen Innovation Act?”2 The latest rebuff by the FDA to speed up approvals has been twofold. First, the FDA implemented a new requirement that any new UV filters considered by the TEA process must pass the stringent requirements of GRASE (Generally Recognized As Safe and Effective), a standard that exceeds the requirements of the very costly and time consuming New Drug Application (NDA). Human absorption studies and other stringent studies now required will take months, if not years, and millions of dollars to complete. Second, the FDA asserted that access to new UV filters will make no difference since skin cancer rates are also rising in Europe, and not only in the US! Illogical Assumptions This assumption is illogical. Yes, it is true that skin cancer is rising worldwide especially in the Northern Hemisphere but there are many other factors that influence rates of skin cancer not just one. Primarily, poor sun protection habits lead to overexposure. More leisure time spent in the sun is part of a culture of affluence that also promotes sun drenched vacations and year-round tans as fashionable. Now, tanning beds deliver damaging UV rays indoors regardless of the season. More people develop skin cancer because of indoor tanning than develop lung cancer due to smoking (see skin cancer facts below). Additionally, superior methods of detection can diagnose skin cancer more precisely than before so the rates have gone up accordingly. The fact remains that the FDA has not updated our sunscreen regulations for years; most of the UV filters in use today in the US reflect the technology and expertise of the late 1970s. We have had only two additional ingredients approved at the end of the last century, namely zinc oxide and avobenzone and, more recently, ecamsule, which is exclusive to L’Oréal. An article in Slate entitled “Burned by Bureaucracy: Why is the FDA stalling on newer and better sunscreens?” author Brian Palmer wrote, “The last time a new sunscreen ingredient came on the US market, the Y2K bug was threatening to destroy our way of life. Newt Gingrich had just resigned his speakership, and Sasha Obama had not been born. Ricky Martin was on top of the charts with ‘Livin’ La Vida Loca,’ and he was still in the closet. The point is, unlike a lot of things, American sunscreens haven’t changed in a long time.”3 Inadequate Options At the risk of sounding like a broken record, our 17 approved UV filters (28 in EU and over 40 in Japan) are woefully inadequate. They are all based on technology developed in the last century that does not adequately address UVA and IR protection or photostability issues. Most of those ingredients, with the exception of the two inorganic particulates, zinc oxide and titanium dioxide, are smaller molecules with molecular weights (Daltons) of less than 350. The new European filters are mostly based on the 500 Dalton Rule of design that prevents skin absorption, offers powerful UVA protection and are generally photostable. The insinuation that Americans should be buying their sunscreens from Europe is plastered all over the Internet. Read for example the article entitled “Why you shouldn’t be buying your sunscreen in America” by Racked’s Chavie Lieber.4 In a recent article5 that I wrote for New York Chapter of the Society of Cosmetic Chemists’ Cosmetiscope entitled “The Road to the Sunscreen Innovation Act”, I had speculated as to the impact of the SIA on our industry, namely:
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