Are hair dyes safe?
The
decision to change hair color has recently become more complicated because some
recent studies have linked hair coloring with an increased risk of contracting
certain cancers. To make matters more confusing other studies do not support
those findings. Most hair dyes also don't have to go through pre-market testing
for safety that other cosmetic color additives do before hitting store shelves.
Consumers are often on their own consequently, when deciding whether hair dyes
are safe.
FDA is responsible for overseeing the safety of cosmetics sold in this
country and can prohibit the sale of any cosmetics found harmful--except most
hair dyes. Although the adulteration provision of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act enables FDA to seek removal of a cosmetic from the market if it is shown to
be harmful under conditions of use, hair coloring made from coal-tar were given
special exemption from bans when the act was passed in 1938.
The main ingredient in the coal-tar hair dyes manufactured at the time
prompted an allergic reaction in some susceptible individuals. Fearing FDA would
ban the sale of hair dyes because some users might develop a rash or have other
allergic reactions, the industry successfully lobbied before the act passed to
get coal-tar hair dyes exempted from the adulteration provision. Manufacturers
were required, however, to include a warning in the labels that the products can
cause skin irritation in certain allergic individuals. Most hair dyes in use
today derive their ingredients from petroleum sources, but have been considered
coal-tar dyes by FDA because they contain some of the same compounds found in
these older dyes.
In 1978, FDA proposed to require a warning on the labels of hair dyes
containing the compounds 4-methoxy-m-phenylenediamine (4MMPD) or
4-methoxy-m-phenylenediamine sulfate (4MMPD sulfate), two coal- tar ingredients.
This followed findings by researchers at the National Cancer Institute in
Bethesda, MD., that rodents fed either of the chemicals were more likely to
develop cancer than animals not fed the substances.
The researchers put the compounds in the animals' feed rather than on the
animals' skin because they were trying to assess the effects of hair dye
ingredients inside the body. (Other studies have shown that a small percentage
of hair dye is absorbed from the scalp and passed into the bloodstream where it
can travel to other organs and tissues.) To detect a cancer-causing effect of
the compounds in a short period in a limited number of animals researchers fed
the animals large doses of the hair dye ingredients.
Some researchers say that extrapolating results from ingested hair dye
studies to absorbed hair dye use cannot accurately assess cancer risk because
the compounds being tested are altered or are absorbed differently in the gut
than they are when applied to the scalp. Moreover, tests of individual hair dye
ingredients don't measure the health hazards of the highly reactive compounds
that are formed when the various ingredients in a specific hair dye are mixed
together and applied to hair.
In other studies, when investigators painted 4MMPD on the skin of rodents,
there was no evidence that the compounds caused cancer in the animals. But
critics claim that not enough of the chemical penetrates the skin from the small
areas on which it's applied to accurately assess the compound's ability to
prompt cancers in a limited number of animals.
After FDA adopted the requirement of a warning about 4MMPD and 4MMPD sulfate,
manufacturers stopped using the chemicals in their hair dyes. In addition, the
hair dye industry has stopped using several other ingredients found to cause
cancer in animals. But some of the cancer-causing compounds have been replaced
by similarly structured chemicals. However, some scientists feel that the
similar structure of these ingredients makes it likely that their cancer-causing
potential won't differ much from the chemicals they're replacing. The agency
continues to monitor the situation and review studies as they are completed.
Several studies have tried to pinpoint the risk of various cancers to hair
dye users by calculating the difference in frequency of cancer in people who
color their hair and those who don't.
Some of these studies found an increased risk of cancer associated with hair
dye use, but failed to consider the effects of other cancer-causing agents, such
as cigarette smoke when comparing the two groups. In other studies the numbers
of people included were too small to lend much statistical credence to the
findings.
To minimize the chance of allergic reactions, before dyeing your hair, test
the product by dabbing a bit behind your ear. Don't wash it off for two days. If
itching, burning, redness, or rash occur, don't use the product.
Several studies found no risk of cancer. Few studies looked at long-term use
of hair dyes (greater than 20 years).
The findings so far are inconclusive, to chemist John Bailey, Ph.D., Director
of FDA's colors and cosmetics program. "The studies raise some questions about
the safety of hair dyes," he says, "but at this point there's no basis for us to
say that hair dyes pose a definitive risk of cancer. In the final analysis,
consumers will need to consider the lack of demonstrated safety when they choose
to use hair dyes."
The less hair dye used over a lifetime, the less likely a person will be
exposed to enough dye to cause cancer, according to Bailey. "My personal
recommendation is that consumers use good judgment and exercise moderation," he
says. "You may reduce the risk of cancer by exposing yourself to less hair
dye--you probably shouldn't change your hair color every week, for example."
People can also reduce their risk by delaying dyeing their hair until later in
life when it starts to turn gray, he adds.
Consumers might also want to consider using henna, which is largely
plant-derived, or hair dyes that are lead acetate-based. These colorings don't
fall into the coal-tar dye category and therefore any additive ingredients they
contain have been tested for safety before marketing, in accordance with FDA
requirements. Henna products on the market can give a range of colors, from dark
brown through various reddish-brown and lighter red to reddish-blond shades.
They cannot, however, lighten hair. Lead acetate dyes gradually darken hair and
are commonly used in progressive type hair colorings, such as those advertised
as being for men. None of these colors may be used on eye-lashes or eyebrows.
Source: Excerpted from FDA Consumer, April 1993: Hair Dye Dilemmas
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