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Many users of skin-lightening product unaware of risks


 

FROM THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WOMEN’S DERMATOLOGY

Illegal products may still be available

Dr. McMichael would like to know how many of these patients used products containing > 4%-strength hydroquinone, because they “can be dangerous, and patients don’t understand how these higher-strength medications can damage the skin.”

“Following the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security [CARES] Act of 2020, over-the-counter hydroquinone sales were prohibited in the U.S.,” the authors write. In 2022, the Food and Drug Administration issued warning letters to 12 companies that sold products containing unsafe concentrations of hydroquinone, because of concerns about swelling, rashes, and discoloration. Hydroquinone has also been linked with skin cancer.

“However, this study demonstrates that consumers in the U.S. may still have access to hydroquinone formulations,” the authors caution.

At its Skin Facts! Resources website, the FDA warns about potentially harmful over-the-counter skin-lightening products containing hydroquinone or mercury and recommends using only prescribed products. The information site was created by the FDA Office of Minority Health and Health Equity.

The study authors, Dr. Baron, and Dr. McMichael report no relevant financial relationships. The study did not receive external funding. All experts commented by email.

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