Dipropylene glycol, cinnamaldehyde
This article was originally published in The Rose Sheet
Executive Summary
Draft technical reports on National Toxicology Program rodent toxicology and carcinogenesis studies on ingredients to be reviewed by NTP Board of Scientific Counselors subcommittee at a Sept. 5-6 meeting in Research Triangle Park, N.C. Dipropylene glycol is used in cosmetics, air fresheners, household cleaners and antifreeze, and cinnamaldehyde is a flavoring and fragrance ingredient. Reports to be publicly available approximately five weeks prior to meeting...
You may also be interested in...
Cinnamaldehyde Shows “No Evidence” Of Carcinogenicity In NTP Studies
Flavor and fragrance ingredient cinnamaldehyde showed "no evidence" of carcinogenic activity in rodent studies conducted by the National Toxicology Program, according to a recently-released draft report of findings
US Q1 Consumer Health Earnings Preview: Label This One Historic And Challenging But Promising
US OTC drug and supplement firms’ reports of results for the first three months of 2024 began on April 19 with P&G. JP Morgan analysts say while “some retailers in the US in particular” are reducing consumer health inventories, for the overall sector they expect “a healthier balance of positive volume and lower pricing contribution.”
Keeping Track: Cancer Approvals From Lumisight Imaging To Adjuvant Alecensa
The US FDA’s approval of Lumicell’s optical imaging agent Lumisight makes a dozen novel approvals in 2024 for the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.