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Review paper

In vivo studies of substances used in the cosmetic industry

Joanna Igielska-Kalwat
,
Joanna Gościańska
,
Beata Witkowska
,
Izabela Nowak

Adv Dermatol Allergol 2016; XXXIII (3): 163-169
Online publish date: 2016/06/17
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- In vivo.pdf  [0.15 MB]
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Introduction

On the basis of the EU Directive of 30 November 2009, the Polish Act on cosmetic products of 30 March 2001 (Journal of Laws of 2001, item 42, as amended) was enacted; the Act in its consolidated text is contained in the Journal of Laws of 2013, item 475. The above Acts makes the producer fully responsible for the product [1]. The regulations describe the conditions and requirements for placing a new product on the market.
The documentation of the product should include [2] specification of the qualitative and quantitative composition of the product, physical/chemical and microbiological properties, purity of components, final physicochemical evaluation including the product stability on storing, microbiological evaluation of the final product, criteria of chemical and microbiological purity of the final product, description of the method of production (compliant with good manufacturing practice), documents confirming the activity declared on the packing, information on undesirable side effects on human health, evaluation of the effect of the product on human health, toxicological characterisation, chemical structure, degree of contact with human body established by the application-apparatus methods [1, 3].
The application-apparatus studies performed on a group of volunteers by the in vivo method are the subject of this paper. A new cosmetic product is thoroughly characterised prior to introduction on the market. The safety of its use and the effectiveness of its activity declared by the producer are tested. The tests are performed in vivo by the so called patch tests on human skin [4]. Only the substances and products attested as nontoxic and non-caustic can be tested on humans [5, 6].
The in vivo studies are performed on healthy volunteers selected taking into account sex, age and type of skin and possible skin problems. The participants are divided into two groups, one is given a cosmetic product with an active substance studied and the other is the control group whose members are given the cosmetic product without the active substance (placebo). Prior to each test the subjects are dermatologically examined. Their type and state of skin are determined, the information on substances they show allergic response to and other information is collected, e.g. on the past or present skin diseases and the treatment applied and on the general state of health. Each volunteer is asked to sign formal consent to participate in the tests and the person conducting the study is obliged to give details of the study and possible side effects. Each person taking part in the test is given a formal written instruction of the cosmetic use and the questionnaire to be filled when using it. The information from the questionnaire is used for possible further improvement of a given product. Depending on the type of product and expected effects, the test can last from a few to more than 10 weeks. The subjects apply the product tested on the forearm twice a day, in the morning and in the evening. During the test they are not allowed to use any other cosmetic products than the one tested [7, 8].
Dermatological evaluation of the effect of a given active substance or product is performed on the basis of one-time occlusive tests, repeated occlusive tests and repeated open application tests. The methods have been developed for sodium laureth sulphate (SLES) as a model irritating substance [9, 10]. The patch tests are mainly used to check the type of response to a given cosmetic product (allergic or irritating).
A series of standard tests can also indicate a component responsible for the irritation [11]. One-time application in the patch test for 24 or 48 h is very simple. It permits identification of substances that can produce acute response and irritation. The one-time application is used to evaluate the irritating potential of a given cosmetic. The method does not correspond to the real exposure to the irritating agent in everyday life as it is usually long-lasting and repeatable [12–14]. Many authors have been concerned with the repeated occlusive patch tests. Frosch and Kligmanin proposed a 5-day pattern: to apply a given substance for 24 h on the first day and then for 6 hours on subsequent 4 days [15–17].
Many models have been proposed for better representation of the use of cosmetic products in everyday life, for instance application of a given substance on the skin in occlusive chamber twice a day for 45 min for 5 days or twice a day for 45 min for 3 weeks [17] or once a day for 2 h over the period of 3 weeks [18, 19].
Since the 1990s, evaluation of the irritating effect of active substance has been performed on the basis of a short-time exposure of skin to a given substance in the patch test. The reaction of the skin is compared to that caused by the simultaneous application of the standard irritating substance SLS in a 20% wt. water solution [20]. The test patches are applied on the skin of the arms. The time of exposure gradually increases from 30 min, to 1, 2, 3 and up to 4 h. The skin reaction is evaluated at 24, 48 and 72 h after the exposure and is described on the scale from 0 to 3+. The tests take 7 weeks for the substance application once a week or 2–3 weeks when the substance is applied twice a week. If a positive response to a given active substance is observed at the same or higher frequency than the response to SLES, then the substance is considered as an irritant [21, 22]. According to Basketter et al. [6], the method is the basis for classification of the active substances of cosmetic products as irritants or non-irritants of human skin [23].
In general, there are three main methods of evaluation based on the use of patch tests [24]: • one-time occlusive test (Schwartz-Peck test); • repeated occlusive test (Human Repeated InsultPatch Test – HRIPT):
– with broken exposure (Draize test, Shelanski – Shelanski test and Voss-Griffith test),
– with continuous exposure (modified Draize test),
– human Maximization Test.
In the Schwartz-Peck test [25], patches covered with the active substance in different doses are applied to the subject skin. Results are checked at 24, 72 and 94 h after application and then after 10 or 14 days. After removal of the patch test, the skin is carefully examined. In the Full Schwartz-Peck test [25] the patches are still used for 4 weeks after the preliminary test. This repeated examination is aimed at detection of strong or dormant allergic reactions [26]. In the Draize test, a series of 10 patch tests are applied on the skin of the arm or back for 24 h, every second day and 3 times a week. After each application, the skin is examined for the presence of swelling and erythema. Two weeks after the last test, the so-called challenge patch is applied for 24 h and then the skin is examined. The results of examination are compared with the earlier results [27].
The Shelanski-Shelanski test [28] is similar to the Draize test but the difference is that a series of 15 patch tests is applied on the same site of the skin. If erythema or swelling appears, the next patch test should be applied on the neighbouring part of skin. After 2–3 weeks from the last patch test application, the challenge patch is applied for 48 h. The results of the final test are compared with the earlier ones [28].
The Voss-Griffith test is similar to that of Draize, but the difference is that a series of 9 patch tests is applied for 24 h over the period of 3 weeks. The challenge patch is applied after 2 weeks from the last test and it is applied at two sites of the skin simultaneously. The first is applied on the arm skin tested earlier and the second on the other arm. This analysis permits simultaneous tests of four materials. If the results are unclear, the repeat application of challenge patch is recommended [29].
The modified Draize test differs from the original Draize test by the fact that the patch tests are changed three times a week until 10 tests are used. The patch test is applied on the same site, unless skin irritation is observed, then the next test is applied on the neighbouring skin area. The challenge patch is applied for 72 h in 2 weeks after the completion of the series of main tests [30]. The human maximization test comprises a series of 5 patch tests applied for 48 h with a 24-hour break. Prior to the main test, for 24 h the preliminary test with 5% wt sodium laureth sulphate is applied before introduction of the potentially irritating substance in a concentration that would produce moderate erythema. In 2 weeks after the last test, the degree of irritation is estimated on the basis of a 48-hour patch test with the maximum non-irritating concentration of the active substance placed on the slightly irritated skin. Results are evaluated after 24 and 48 h [31] (Table 1).
Thin-layer Rapid Use Epicutaneous test or TRUE test is a ready-made patch test applied usually on the skin of the back or forearm (Figure 1 A). The patch comprises 24 windows, of which 23 contain the substances studied and the last window is the control one (Figure 1 B). The allergens are contained in hydrophilic gel coated with the watertight polyester.
The content of allergens is selected according to the European directive that defines 75% of reasons for the allergic contact skin inflammation. This test permits identification of the subject’s allergic responses to any of the 47 allergic substances. Up to date, it is the only patch test approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and EU legal regulations that apply to therapeutic substances [33–35].
Repeated Open Application Test or ROAT involves a short-time exposure of skin to the substance studied without occlusion, at a certain frequency [38]. ROAT as well as the provocative use test (PUT) are the so-called use tests proposed to more accurately correspond to everyday use of a given product.
In these tests a certain amount of the substance studied is applied once or twice a day on the skin of the forearm, elbow pit or other site for a period of from 4 to 28 days [9, 39–41]. The drawback of the tests is their duration. A variation of the test is the wash test and exaggerated wash test in which a certain area of the skin (usually forearm or arm) is washed with the substance studied at a certain frequency and for a certain period of time [42]. The procedures involve the induction of skin irritation by washing the skin with the active substance studied 3 times a day for 6 days, and then maintaining the irritation by twice a day exposure. The substance studied is applied in different concentrations producing skin irritation [43].
The clinical examination of biophysical properties is made and the results are expressed on a special scale. No perfect agreement has been found between the evaluation of the irritating effect of a given substance on the basis of occlusive tests and open tests. The patch tests are used to evaluate the acute irritating effect, while the use tests permit evaluation of the ability of a given substance to produce irritation as a result of repeated exposure [44–46].
Direct Peptide Reactivity Assay DPRA of glutathione (GSH) and two other promising in vitro methods developed for evaluation of allergic response of the skin: human cell line activation (hCLAT) and the myeloid u937 skin sensitisation test (MUSST) have been optimised and admitted by the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative Methods (ECVAM) in 2009 for preliminary validation [47]. Until 30 June 2014, only DPRA [48] was validated.
The allergic skin response is also predicted on the basis of the chemical structure and properties of related substances by the Structure–Activity Relationship (SAR) and Quantitative Structure–Activity Relationship (QSAR) methods based on in silico methodology [49]. Table 2 presents the methods currently used for evaluation of the allergic response or irritation, including the occlusive and open patch tests.
After the tests the skin is subjected to clinical examination, also known as instrumental evaluation. The presence of erythema, exfoliation, clefts is checked and some biophysical parameters are measured (by non-invasive methods) including: level of moisture content, content of grease on the skin surface and transepidermal water loss.
The moisture content depends on the moisture of the corneal layer of epidermis and its measurement is based on electric properties of skin by a corneometer. The content of grease on the skin is based on the photometry of grease spot [50] by a submeter. This instrument measures the content of grease on the skin with the help of plastic foil whose light transparency depends on the content of grease on its surface. This measurement brings information on the functioning of the skin sebaceous glands.
The skin elasticity is measured by a probe which has a special opening through which skin is sucked in under reduced pressure. The amount of skin sucked in is greater if the skin is flabby than if the skin is firm. The results are expressed in the form of a dimensionless coefficient of skin elasticity (R). The surface of the skin is covered with furrows [51] and other irregularities. The state of the skin surface, depending on internal and external factors, is described by the skin smoothness. This parameter describing the skin is evaluated on the basis of images in UV radiation. Using a special camera, microtopographic photographs of the surface of epidermis are taken, revealing all wrinkles, furrows and irregularities. The method of UV imaging permits evaluation of the roughness and smoothness of epidermis, degree of epidermis exfoliation, length, width and depth of wrinkles, a general condition of the skin. The colour of the skin is evaluated according to the colorimetric scale [52].
Measurement is made by a probe permitting evaluation of the intensity of skin coloration. The last but also the most important parameter describing the skin state is the transepidermal water loss by a tewameter or evaporimeter which measure the rate of water evaporation from the skin surface. The measurement gives information on the duration of correct skin moisture. The degree of erythema and intensity of coloration of pigment spots are also evaluated [53].
Moreover, the state of skin is described on the basis of sensory examination. Sensory analysis is a scientific discipline concerned with measurement and evaluation of a product with the help of human senses (sight, smell, taste, touch and hearing). The evaluation is usually performed by a trained panel of human assessors on whom the product is tested in specified and controlled conditions [54].
The experiments can be performed by the half by half method. The member of the panel gets two test packages of preparations containing the cosmetic products studied of different composition or different concentration of the active component. There is also the double blank method in which neither the person conducting the experiment nor the person testing the product know what the difference between the preparations is. Sensory analysis of cosmetic products are fundamental for their full evaluation. On the basis of the consumer testing it is possible to elicit the information on the features of the products most important for certain groups of consumers and their preferences. The subjective opinions of consumers are recorded and then analysed by the uniform verification standards. The results are used by producers in the process of introduction and improvement of their products [55–57].

Conclusions

Cosmetic industry is working on new alternative methods for evaluation of the active substances in the cosmetic products on the basis of determination of their effectiveness, toxicity, tendency to evoke allergic reaction and skin irritation. Tests on volunteers are a very important part of the process of product evaluation providing information on the product activity and consumer satisfaction with it. The test on people have to conform with the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki [58], EU Directive 2001/20/EC of 4 April 2001 [59], Directive of the Ministry of Health of 2 May 2012 on good clinical practice [60], and the Directive of the Ministry of Health of 22 May 2013 on good laboratory practice [61].

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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