Antibacterial hand soaps and body washes should demonstrate their products are safe and more effective than normal soap.
U.S.
regulators on Monday 16 issued a proposed rule that would require makers of
antibacterial hand soaps and body washes to demonstrate their products are safe
and more effective than soap and water in preventing infection and the spread
of bacteria.
"Although
consumers generally view these products as effective tools to help prevent the
spread of germs, there is currently no evidence that they are any more
effective at preventing illness than washing with plain soap and water,"
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said in a statement.
The FDA
said research has suggested long-term exposure to antibacterial chemicals, such
as triclosan in liquid soaps and triclocarban in bar soaps, could have hormonal
affects and allow bacteria to mutate into harder-to-control strains.
The agency
said companies that fail to demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of their
products would have to reformulate them to back up the product claims, or
re-label them to keep them on store shelves.
Such
products are widely sold and touted, and include SoftSoap products from Colgate
Palmolive, Cetaphil from Galderma Laboratories, and Dial products from Henkel
AG.
The FDA
said the action is part of a larger ongoing review by the agency to ensure that
antibacterial ingredients are safe and effective. But the proposed rule would
not affect hand sanitizers, wipes or antimicrobial products used in healthcare
settings, the agency said.
The move
comes five days after the FDA issued new guidelines to phase out the use of
antibiotics as a growth enhancer in livestock, also in an effort to stem a
surge in human resistance to antibiotics.
"Due
to consumers' extensive exposure to the ingredients in antibacterial soaps, we
believe there should be a clearly demonstrated benefit ... to balance any potential
risk," said Janet Woodcock, director of the FDA's Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research.
Almost all
soaps labeled "antibacterial" or "antimicrobial" contain at
least one of the antibacterial ingredients addressed in the FDA's proposed
rule, most notably triclosan and triclocarban, and some labeled
"deodorant" may also contain these ingredients, the agency said.
The
proposed rule will be available for public comment for 180 days. Concurrently,
companies will be given one year to submit new data and information, followed
by a 60-day rebuttal comment period.
Source: FDA
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