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FDA now weighing approval of first new sunscreen ingredient in decades

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The Food and Drug Administration is now weighing whether to approve the first new sunscreen ingredient for the U.S. market in decades, European skincare company DSM-Firmenich announced this week.

DSM-Firmenich says the FDA is expected to decide within the next 17.5 months  — by March 2026 — on the company’s request to approve the sunscreen ingredient bemotrizinol, branded as PARSOL Shield. 

“PARSOL Shield has been safely used worldwide for over 20 years, and we are proud to lead the introduction of this proven technology to U.S. consumers,” Parand Salmassinia, president of beauty and care at DSM-Firmenich, said in a release.

The company began running a new round of studies on the ingredient requested by the FDA in 2019, Carl D’Ruiz, senior regulatory and business development manager for DSM-Firmenich, told CBS News. 

News of the potential approval comes as the FDA is demanding more research into many sunscreen ingredients currently on the U.S. market, over safety questions

The FDA has also been facing criticism from members of Congress, frustrated with the gulf between the U.S. market versus the newer sunscreen options now available abroad.

A sunscreen ingredient widely used overseas

While bemotrizinol would be new for the U.S. market, D’Ruiz said brands in other countries have been using it for decades. Under other names like BEMT or Tinosorb S, many sunscreens bought in Japan, South Korea and across Europe use the chemical.

Manufacturers can make formulations with bemotrizinol that are “less pasty” and look better on people of color, compared to some older options.

“Consumers are purchasing products with bemotrizinol when they go abroad, simply because they feel good, look good, and like the way it goes on the skin,” he said.

Bemotrizinol will also be the first to study all the safety questions outlined by the FDA’s stepped-up standards on sunscreen risks, D’Ruiz said.

“No other ingredient is going to have the same level of substantiation for safety, especially long-term safety, and developmental and reproductive safety,” said D’Ruiz.

It also comes as DSM-Firmenich and others in the industry have been lobbying Congress over changes they think could make it easier to bring more sunscreen ingredients to the U.S. that could be popular with Americans, potentially resulting in higher sales of sunscreen products and less skin cancer.

One gripe comes down to the economics of clearing the FDA’s hurdles, D’Ruiz said, which will only afford companies 18 months of “exclusivity” for selling the ingredient.

“The return on the investment is just not there. Maybe nobody is going to want to do this again. And that’s going to jeopardize public health,” he said.

Safety of current sunscreens

An FDA proposal from 2019 floated pulling the approvals for more than a dozen sunscreen ingredients. Only two sunscreen ingredients — zinc oxide and titanium dioxide — would be able to keep their decades-old approvals under that proposal.

For most of the others, the FDA said there were “significant gaps” in evidence of their safety. Studies had raised questions about whether “significant systemic exposure” to those ingredients might lead to health issues. More research was needed to rule out long-term risks like cancer or hormone disruption.

Addressing those concerns would require the industry to do more animal testing, similar to studies routinely required for other kinds of drugs, the FDA said. 

Animal rights groups and lawmakers have criticized the FDA for insisting that the industry run animal testing on the sunscreens. But developing alternatives to animal testing would take “years and years,” the FDA said — too late for a decision it hoped to make “in the near future.”

Records the FDA released from meetings last year with an industry trade group, the Personal Care Products Council, or PCPC, show federal officials were frustrated with a lack of progress.

An FDA spokesperson did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A representative for Integral Consulting, which took over the sunscreen industry working group from PCPC, declined to comment.

“During the comment summary, PCPC stated sunscreen ingredients are safe. In response, FDA stated the safety of sunscreens has not yet been established,” the agency said last year, in minutes from the meeting.



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12/18: The Daily Report – CBS News

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12/18: The Daily Report – CBS News


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Lindsey Reiser reports on the status of government funding to avoid a shutdown, what a new interest rate cut means for your wallet, and the top entertainment stories that defined 2024.

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Teacher, student killed in Wisconsin school shooting identified

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A teacher and student killed in a shooting earlier this week at a school in Madison, Wisconsin, were identified Wednesday by authorities.

The Dane County Medical Examiner’s Office said in a news release provided to CBS News that 42-year-old Erin West and 14-year-old Rubi Vergara were fatally shot Monday morning at Abundant Life Christian School.

Preliminary examinations determined the two died of “homicidal firearm related trauma.” Both were pronounced dead at the scene, the medical examiner said.

An online obituary on a local funeral site stated Vergara was a freshman who leaves behind her parents, one brother, and a large extended family. It described her as “an avid reader” who “loved art, singing and playing keyboard in the family worship band.” 

West’s exact position with the school was unclear.   

The medical examiner also confirmed that a preliminary autopsy found that the suspected shooter, 15-year-old Natalie Rupnow — a student at the same school — was pronounced dead at a local hospital Monday of “firearm related trauma.” Madison Chief of Police Shon F. Barnes had previously told reporters that Rupnow was pronounced dead while being transported to a hospital. 

Police had also previously stated that she was believed to have died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

The shooting at the private Christian K-12 school was reported just before 11 a.m. Monday. In addition to the two people killed and the shooter, six others were wounded.  

Police said the shooting occurred in a classroom where a study hall was taking place involving students from several grades.

A handgun was recovered after the shooting, Barnes said, but it was unclear where the gun came from or how many shots were fired. A law enforcement source said the weapon used in the shooting appears to have been a 9 mm pistol.

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Last-minute government funding bill in limbo after opposition from Trump, others

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Last-minute government funding bill in limbo after opposition from Trump, others – CBS News


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A bipartisan House deal on a short-term funding measure that would avoid a potential shutdown and keep the government operational through March appeared to have been scrapped Wednesday after President-elect Donald Trump, Vice President-elect JD Vance and some hardline Republican lawmakers came out against it. Nikole Killion has details from Capitol Hill.

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