FDA Panel Reiterates the Cancer Risks of Talc
23 Maio 2025 - 9:00AM
Business Wire
Links of ovarian cancer to baby powder use
raise concerns about use in cosmetics, food, drugs
A panel of medical experts convened by the U.S. Food & Drug
Administration urged the agency to study and adopt new standards to
prohibit the use of talc in consumer products such as gum, candy,
rice and pharmaceuticals.
Many of the experts cited the more than 30 years of studies
showing an association between talc use and ovarian cancer, which
led Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) to remove the company’s iconic
body powders from the market in recent years.
“It’s clear (talc) is carcinogenic and inflammatory and there’s
very little doubt about this,” said Dr. George Tidmarsh, an
acclaimed pediatric neonatologist and professor at Stanford
University. “In my opinion, it’s not a matter of if talc should be
removed from the U.S. market, it’s a matter of how and when. It’s a
dangerous substance.”
Dr. Tidmarsh noted that the work of several of the experts on
the panel, such as Dr. Daniel Cramer of Brigham and Women’s
Hospital and Harvard Medical School, provided the foundational
basis showing the association between talc and ovarian cancer. In
1982, Dr. Cramer was the first clinician to publish a peer-reviewed
study that revealed at least an 82% increased risk of ovarian
cancer among women who regularly used talc-based powders for
feminine hygiene.
Since that time, more than 40 studies have been published
supporting those findings. In addition, hundreds of tests,
including those conducted by the FDA, have revealed the presence of
asbestos in cosmetic talc, further increasing the carcinogenic risk
of any talc exposure.
Last year, the National Institutes of Health affirmed what the
organization termed “compelling evidence that genital talc use is
associated with an increased risk of ovarian cancer.” In 2022, the
Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium, consisting of top
researchers from leading cancer research hospitals around the
world, called the genital exposure to talcum powder a “well
established ovarian cancer risk factor,” a similar position now
taken by the National Academy of Medicine.
Several members of the FDA’s panel cited last year’s
announcement by the International Agency for Research on Cancer
that raised the organization’s classification of the cancer risk
stemming from genital talc use from “possible” to “probable.”
“It was encouraging to see this distinguished panel with
representatives from the FDA, NIH and the nation’s leading
hospitals and medical schools agree that there remains little doubt
about the causal link between talc and cancer," says Andy
Birchfield of the Beasley Allen Law Firm, among the law firms with
ovarian cancer lawsuits against Johnson & Johnson pending in a
New Jersey federal court, as well as in other state courts. “In
recent years, the science showing the dangers of talc exposure to
women has only increased, with no new studies to indicate
otherwise, and we look forward to presenting that evidence in court
at the earliest possible opportunity.”
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250523174238/en/
Media Contact: Mike Androvett 800-559-4534
mike@androvett.com
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