Cosmetic Formulations from Natural Sources: Safety Considerations and Legislative Frameworks in the European Union
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Safety Considerations
2.1. Hazard Assessment
2.1.1. Microbial Contaminants Relevant for Natural Cosmetic Ingredients
2.1.2. Chemical Contaminants Associated with Natural Cosmetic Ingredients
2.1.3. Allergens in Natural Cosmetic Ingredients
2.2. Toxicological Aspects
2.2.1. The Matrix Complexity of Natural Cosmetic Ingredients
2.2.2. Recommended Toxicological Testing for Natural Cosmetics
- Skin sensitisation
Natural Cosmetic Ingredient | Endpoint | New Approach Methodology | Experimental Conditions | Findings | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Selected botanical extracts | Repeated dose toxicity | Threshold of toxicological concern (TTC) | Meta-analysis was used to derive the TTC for botanical extracts. | Authors proposed a new TTC of 663 μg/day for botanical extracts used in cosmetics. | [80] |
16 botanical extracts | Skin sensitisation | Sen-Is h-CLAT 1, Keratino-Sens | Extracts underwent testing in the Sen-Is assay; negative results were confirmed using the h-CLAT followed by the KeratinoSens assay. | Three botanical extracts (Orbignya phalerata, Arctium lappa, and Apiaceae herb extracts) showed sensitisation potential. | [77] |
Galenia Africana extract | Dermal irritation | SkinEthic Episkin irritation assay | The cell viability of Episkin RHE 2 was assessed after 3-h exposure to 1% and 20% doses of extracts. | Galenia Africana extract is a non-irritant. | [81] |
Aqueous extracts of C. micranthum and A. occidentale hexane extracts of M. oleifera and A. digitata seeds | Repeated dose toxicity | In vitro reconstructed human pigmented epidermis (RHPE) model for four days | The cell viability of Episkin RHPE was assessed after a 4-day daily administration of variable doses of the three extracts. | The extracts were non-toxic to cells, except for A. occidentale and A. digitata at certain doses. | [82] |
Twenty natural extracts | Photoreactivity and phototoxicity | Reactive oxygen species (ROS) assay, micellar ROS assay, and the 3T3 neutral red uptake phototoxicity test | The absorbance of extracts, irradiated for 1 h, was measured to detect ROS formation. | Three extracts (St. John’s wort powder, tagetes oil, and cumin seed oil) exhibited the highest phototoxicity. | [83] |
The viability of 3T3 cells was assessed after incubation in darkness or irradiation following a 1-h exposure to variable extract doses. | |||||
Water-in-oil-in-water emulsion with 7.5% rosemary extract, 24.18% flaxseed mucilage, and 44.03% oatmeal suspension | Irritation, phototoxicity | In vitro skin irritation and phototoxicity assay with EpiDerm skin model | The viability of the EpiDerm skin tissue was measured after treatment with sample for 3, 5, and 18 h. | Cytotoxicity was observed for tissues treated for 18 h. | [84] |
The viability of the EpiDerm skin tissue was assessed after incubation in darkness or irradiation following an 18-h exposure to variable extract doses. | Sample showed no phototoxicity, irrespective of the concentration. |
- 2.
- Dermal and eye irritation/corrosion
- 3.
- Photo-induced effects
- 4.
- Dermal absorption
- 5.
- Acute toxicity
- 6.
- Repeated dose toxicity studies
- 7.
- Mutagenicity/genotoxicity
- 8.
- Carcinogenicity
- 9.
- Reproductive toxicity
3. The European Union Legislative Framework
3.1. Requirements for Safety Reporting
3.2. Approaches for Safety Testing: Ban on Animal Tests for Cosmetic Ingredients
3.3. Requirements for Cosmetic Ingredients with Restrictions and Permissible Ingredients
4. Future Perspectives
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Alternative Test | Toxicological Endpoints | Validated Method |
---|---|---|
Human cell activation test (h-CLAT) | Skin sensitisation | OECD TG 442E |
Amino acid derivative reactivity assay (ADRA) | Skin sensitisation | OECD 442C |
Direct peptide reactivity assay | Skin sensitisation | OECD 442C |
LuSens | Skin sensitisation | OECD TG 442D |
KeratinoSens | Skin sensitisation | OECD TG 442D |
IL-8 luciferase assay for skin sensitisation | Skin sensitisation | OECD TG 442E |
epiCS skin irritation test | Skin irritation | OECD TG 439 |
LabCyte EPI-MODEL24 skin irritation test | Skin irritation | OECD TG 439 |
Isolated chicken eye | Serious eye damage/Eye irritation | OECD TG 438 |
Vitrigel-eye irritancy test | Serious eye damage/Eye irritation | OECD TG 494 |
LabCyteCORNEAMODEL24 eye irritation test | Serious eye damage/Eye irritation | OECD TG 492 |
Ocular irritection | Serious eye damage/Eye irritation | OECD TG 496 |
SkinEthic HCE eye irritation test | Serious eye damage/Eye irritation | OECD TG 492 |
EpiOcular human cell construct EIT | Serious eye damage/Eye irritation | OECD TG 492 |
NRU phototoxicity assay | Skin irritation | OECD TG 432 |
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) assay for photoreactivity | Skin irritation, Skin sensitisation, Genotoxicity/Mutagenicity | OECD TG 495 |
Neutral red uptake for starting doses for acute oral toxicity | Acute toxicity, Basal cytotoxicity | OECD Document 129 |
Ames test | Mutagenicity | OECD TG 437 |
In vitro mammalian cell micronucleus test | Genotoxicity/Mutagenicity | OECD TG 487 |
In vitro BALB/c 3T3 cell transformation assay | Carcinogenicity | OECD Guide 231 |
Physicochemical Property | Value |
---|---|
Molecular weight | >500 Da |
Degree of ionisation | High |
Octanol water partition coefficient, Log Pow | ≤−1 or ≥4 |
Topological surface area | >120 Å2 |
Melting point | >200 °C |
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Manful, M.E.; Ahmed, L.; Barry-Ryan, C. Cosmetic Formulations from Natural Sources: Safety Considerations and Legislative Frameworks in the European Union. Cosmetics 2024, 11, 72. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11030072
Manful ME, Ahmed L, Barry-Ryan C. Cosmetic Formulations from Natural Sources: Safety Considerations and Legislative Frameworks in the European Union. Cosmetics. 2024; 11(3):72. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11030072
Chicago/Turabian StyleManful, Maame Ekua, Lubna Ahmed, and Catherine Barry-Ryan. 2024. "Cosmetic Formulations from Natural Sources: Safety Considerations and Legislative Frameworks in the European Union" Cosmetics 11, no. 3: 72. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11030072