The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Consumer safety considerations of skin and oral microbiome perturbation

Consumer safety considerations of skin and oral microbiome perturbation
Consumer safety considerations of skin and oral microbiome perturbation

Microbiomes associated with human skin and the oral cavity are uniquely exposed to personal care regimes. Changes in the composition and activities of the microbial communities in these environments can be utilized to promote consumer health benefits, for example, by reducing the numbers, composition, or activities of microbes implicated in conditions such as acne, axillary odor, dandruff, and oral diseases. It is, however, important to ensure that innovative approaches for microbiome manipulation do not unsafely disrupt the microbiome or compromise health, and where major changes in the composition or activities of the microbiome may occur, these require evaluation to ensure that critical biological functions are unaffected. This article is based on a 2-day workshop held at SEAC Unilever, Sharnbrook, United Kingdom, involving 31 specialists in microbial risk assessment, skin and oral microbiome research, microbial ecology, bioinformatics, mathematical modeling, and immunology. The first day focused on understanding the potential implications of skin and oral microbiome perturbation, while approaches to characterize those perturbations were discussed during the second day. This article discusses the factors that the panel recommends be considered for personal care products that target the microbiomes of the skin and the oral cavity.

Consumer Product Safety, Cosmetics/standards, Education, Humans, Microbiota/physiology, Mouth/microbiology, Skin/microbiology
0893-8512
McBain, Andrew J
11651ba2-2296-441e-80e7-b00ca486d765
O'Neill, Catherine A
803fd3d3-cd51-4083-bf7d-2b0db0f7c04a
Amezquita, Alejandro
c2e6adc5-f693-4f4e-8d54-b98c4433ebc8
Price, Laura J
b4bd9e66-027e-4066-ac38-629405149225
Faust, Karoline
63e32362-a2c6-42be-b87e-be041a11db04
Tett, Adrian
14df0090-24d4-4519-94c3-19838a5b9347
Segata, Nicola
7dc2d3a5-478c-4c19-96c0-3ada8dc086f2
Swann, Jonathan R.
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Smith, Adrian M
d34fbe70-7bc3-47c9-b39b-2b857d2c7d8f
Murphy, Barry
cced0235-6b26-4ea9-a6b4-e900cb322f14
Hoptroff, Michael
6b4bd521-f0c4-4076-b93e-ad9c65d48176
James, Gordon
d223291a-585e-4658-89b5-3c769b83114b
Reddy, Yugandhar
70c9822a-c62d-4371-a36d-4a71889505b6
Dasgupta, Anindya
b71b7532-c6fb-4926-9c32-07a5a3e25d9a
Ross, Tom
0572c758-642d-4ba3-ab83-42c0676fc7ba
Chapple, Iain L
370d4c10-bce4-4121-9e1a-5e08b4768108
Wade, William G
e41070bc-cef3-49c2-b686-aa6779edac22
Fernandez-Piquer, Judith
832a642c-069e-429a-888b-efb755762427
McBain, Andrew J
11651ba2-2296-441e-80e7-b00ca486d765
O'Neill, Catherine A
803fd3d3-cd51-4083-bf7d-2b0db0f7c04a
Amezquita, Alejandro
c2e6adc5-f693-4f4e-8d54-b98c4433ebc8
Price, Laura J
b4bd9e66-027e-4066-ac38-629405149225
Faust, Karoline
63e32362-a2c6-42be-b87e-be041a11db04
Tett, Adrian
14df0090-24d4-4519-94c3-19838a5b9347
Segata, Nicola
7dc2d3a5-478c-4c19-96c0-3ada8dc086f2
Swann, Jonathan R.
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Smith, Adrian M
d34fbe70-7bc3-47c9-b39b-2b857d2c7d8f
Murphy, Barry
cced0235-6b26-4ea9-a6b4-e900cb322f14
Hoptroff, Michael
6b4bd521-f0c4-4076-b93e-ad9c65d48176
James, Gordon
d223291a-585e-4658-89b5-3c769b83114b
Reddy, Yugandhar
70c9822a-c62d-4371-a36d-4a71889505b6
Dasgupta, Anindya
b71b7532-c6fb-4926-9c32-07a5a3e25d9a
Ross, Tom
0572c758-642d-4ba3-ab83-42c0676fc7ba
Chapple, Iain L
370d4c10-bce4-4121-9e1a-5e08b4768108
Wade, William G
e41070bc-cef3-49c2-b686-aa6779edac22
Fernandez-Piquer, Judith
832a642c-069e-429a-888b-efb755762427

McBain, Andrew J, O'Neill, Catherine A, Amezquita, Alejandro, Price, Laura J, Faust, Karoline, Tett, Adrian, Segata, Nicola, Swann, Jonathan R., Smith, Adrian M, Murphy, Barry, Hoptroff, Michael, James, Gordon, Reddy, Yugandhar, Dasgupta, Anindya, Ross, Tom, Chapple, Iain L, Wade, William G and Fernandez-Piquer, Judith (2019) Consumer safety considerations of skin and oral microbiome perturbation. Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 32 (4). (doi:10.1128/CMR.00051-19).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Microbiomes associated with human skin and the oral cavity are uniquely exposed to personal care regimes. Changes in the composition and activities of the microbial communities in these environments can be utilized to promote consumer health benefits, for example, by reducing the numbers, composition, or activities of microbes implicated in conditions such as acne, axillary odor, dandruff, and oral diseases. It is, however, important to ensure that innovative approaches for microbiome manipulation do not unsafely disrupt the microbiome or compromise health, and where major changes in the composition or activities of the microbiome may occur, these require evaluation to ensure that critical biological functions are unaffected. This article is based on a 2-day workshop held at SEAC Unilever, Sharnbrook, United Kingdom, involving 31 specialists in microbial risk assessment, skin and oral microbiome research, microbial ecology, bioinformatics, mathematical modeling, and immunology. The first day focused on understanding the potential implications of skin and oral microbiome perturbation, while approaches to characterize those perturbations were discussed during the second day. This article discusses the factors that the panel recommends be considered for personal care products that target the microbiomes of the skin and the oral cavity.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 31 July 2019
Published date: 18 September 2019
Keywords: Consumer Product Safety, Cosmetics/standards, Education, Humans, Microbiota/physiology, Mouth/microbiology, Skin/microbiology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 442008
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/442008
ISSN: 0893-8512
PURE UUID: 194a0633-19b6-47ba-8681-240dddc6ca0c
ORCID for Jonathan R. Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 03 Jul 2020 16:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Andrew J McBain
Author: Catherine A O'Neill
Author: Alejandro Amezquita
Author: Laura J Price
Author: Karoline Faust
Author: Adrian Tett
Author: Nicola Segata
Author: Adrian M Smith
Author: Barry Murphy
Author: Michael Hoptroff
Author: Gordon James
Author: Yugandhar Reddy
Author: Anindya Dasgupta
Author: Tom Ross
Author: Iain L Chapple
Author: William G Wade
Author: Judith Fernandez-Piquer

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×