Case Letter

Sun Protection Factor Testing: A Call for an In Vitro Method

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Practice Points

  • The methodology for determining sun protection factor (SPF) that currently is accepted by the US Food and Drug Administration is an expensive and imprecise in vivo test that exposes human participants to harmful UV radiation.
  • In vitro tests for determining SPF may be viable alternatives to the current in vivo gold standard.
  • Researchers and the sunscreen industry should actively develop these in vitro methodologies to adopt a more accurate and less harmful test for SPF.


 

References

The sun protection factor (SPF) value indicates to consumers the level of protection that a given sunscreen formulation provides against erythemally effective UV radiation (UVR). 1 In vivo SPF testing, the gold standard for determining SPF, yields highly variable results and can harm human test participants. 2 In vitro SPF testing methodologies have been under development for years but none have (yet) replaced the in vivo test required by national and international regulatory agencies.

Recent European studies have shown strong data to support a highly standardized in vitro method,1 now under development by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)—potentially to serve as a new SPF determination standard.1,3 Academia and industry should follow this example and actively take steps to develop and validate a suitable replacement for in vivo SPF testing.

In Vivo SPF Testing

The in vivo SPF test involves comparing doses of UVR necessary to induce erythema in human participants with and without sunscreen applied.2 Although this method has long been the standard for SPF determination, it is associated with the following major disadvantages:

  • Cost: The in vivo test is expensive.
  • Variability: Results of the test are subject to high interlaboratory variability due to the inherent subjectivity of identifying erythema, the variable skin types of human participants, and other laboratory-dependent factors.2 A study found that the average coefficient of variation for SPF values obtained from 3 or 4 laboratories to be 20%—with values exceeding 50% in some cases. With that level of variability, the same sunscreen may be labeled SPF 30, SPF 50, or SPF 50+, thereby posing a health risk to consumers who rely on the accuracy of such claims. In fact, Miksa et al2 concluded that “the largest obstacle to a reliable SPF assessment for consumer health is the in vivo SPF test itself.”
  • Ethical concerns: Human participants are intentionally exposed to harmful UVR until sunburn is achieved. For that reason, there have been calls to abandon the practice of in vivo testing.1

Alternatives to In Vivo SPF Testing

There has been international interest in developing in silico and in vitro alternatives to the in vivo SPF test. These options are attractive because they are relatively inexpensive; avoid exposing human participants to harmful UVR; and have the potential to be more accurate and more reproducible than in vivo tests.

In Vitro Protocols—Many such in vitro tests exist; all generally involve applying a layer of sunscreen to an artificial substrate, exposing it to UVR from a solar simulator, and measuring the UVR transmittance through the product and film by spectrophotometry.1 Prior shortcomings of this method have included suboptimal reproducibility, lack of data on substrate and product properties, and lack of demonstrated equivalency to in vivo SPF testing.4

In Silico Protocols—These tests use data on the UV spectra of sunscreen filters, physical characteristics of sunscreen films on skin, and the unique photoinstability of filters to calculate expected UVR transmittance and SPF of sunscreens based on their ingredients.5 Reports have shown high correlation with in vivo values. Results are not subject to random error; reproducibility is theoretically perfect.5

Regulatory Agencies and In Vitro Testing

In the United States, sunscreens are regulated as over-the-counter drugs. In vivo testing is the only US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)–approved method for determining SPF for labeling purposes.1 In a 2007 Proposed Rule and a 2011 Final Rule, the FDA stated that in vitro SPF tests were an inadequate alternative to in vivo tests because of their shortcomings.4,6

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