J&J, which issued a voluntarily recall of the five different
Neutrogena and Aveeno brand products, began testing after Valisure -
an online pharmacy that tests its products for contaminants - found
benzene in dozens of suncare products and asked the FDA to look into
it in May.
"The root cause of the benzene found in recalled sunscreen products
is the focus of ongoing investigation," FDA spokesman Jeremy Kahn
said. "We will continue to monitor sunscreen manufacturing and
marketing to help ensure the availability of safe sunscreens for
U.S. consumers."
On Friday, Valisure Chief Executive David Light said in an interview
that he believes the benzene will likely be traced to contaminated
raw materials and that he does not believe that the problem is
inherent to aerosol sunscreens, or sunscreens in general. "There's
probably the most evidence for raw material contamination," Light
said. He said that is because the contamination was found in a
scattered fashion among brands, and even within brands, suggesting
that it was unlikely to be a problem with the chemical or mineral
active ingredients.
Valisure also found benzene in products made by other companies than
J&J. CVS has halted sales of two of its sunburn healing products,
which were in Valisure's petition.
The market for suncare products was around $8 billion globally last
year, and J&J sold around $620 million of its brands. In the U.S.,
the market was around $1.6 billion and J&J's sales were around $290
million, according to EuroMonitor. Shares were flat on Friday at
$168.12. Benzene is a chemical frequently used in manufacturing
processes to make other chemicals, said Dr. Adam Friedman, a
professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University
School of Medicine.
[to top of second column] |
He said benzene is not a
byproduct of sunscreen filters - the various
minerals or chemicals used to block the sun's
harmful rays. Dr. Joe Schwarcz, a chemistry
professor and director of the Office for Science
and Society at McGill University in Montreal
said in an email that he believed “the risk is
minimal because the dose of benzene is too
small.” The FDA said that given the recognized
public health benefits of sunscreen, parents
should continue to use broad spectrum sunscreens
with SPF 15 or higher. Friedman said several
summer camps are collecting all forms of aerosol
sun block, not just J&J, including Camp Tawanda
in Honsedale, Pennsylvania, his children's sleep
away camp, where Friedman is volunteering as
camp doctor.
"I have a trunk full of sunscreens for
everybody," he said.
(Reporting by Michael Erman in New Jersey and
Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Additional
reporting by Richa Naidu in Chicago and Joyce
Philippe in New York; Editing by Caroline Humer
and Alistair Bell)
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