HIGH RISK
Should I Avoid bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide During Pregnancy? | VeriMom
Reviewed by VeriMom Editorial Team · Last reviewed
What to use instead
Pregnancy-safe ingredients that serve a similar function:
Pregnancy-safe products to use instead
Products built around the safer ingredients above, scored "no known risks" or "low risk".

Avero
100Avero Solid Deodorant

Mew mew tweet
100Mew mew tweet Cedar Spruce Baking Soda Free

L'Occitane
100L´Occitane Powder To-mousse Facial Exfoliator

Unknown
100schmidts here now

Sustain Yourself
100Sustain Yourself Natural Deodorant

Bitamin
100Bitamin Natural Deodorant N'orange

Routine
99Routine Sweet Jane Deodorant Jar

Laura Mercier
99Laura Mercier Tinted Moisturizer Broad Spectrum Spf 20 - Oil Free

Routine
99Routine The Curator

bareMinerals
99bareMinerals Complexion Rescue Tinted Hydrating Gel Cream SPF 30
Sources & references
Authoritative references used to score this ingredient.
Pregnancy-Safe Alternatives to bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide | VeriMom
Ingredients — Pregnancy-Safe Ingredients Database — 28,000+ Ingredients Rated
See also
FAQ
- Is bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide safe during pregnancy?
- Class-based reproductive/developmental concern: retinoids (vitamin A derivatives) are a known class with developmental/teratogenic effects; SCCS has updated guidance/restrictions for vitamin A in cosmetics. No evidence found that this specific CAS (666854-47-3) is harmonised as H360/H361 or listed in Annex II, but because it is a retinoyl derivative the conservative classification is 'suspected' reproductive hazard (h=2). Mechanism: retinoid / retinoic-acid receptor agonism is a well-characterised developmental mechanism (m=3). Exposure: topical retinoid derivatives have measurable dermal absorption in use; assign moderate exposure for adults (e=2). Sources: SCCS vitamin A opinion (EU), PubChem / cosmetic ingredient lists, supplier pages.
- Is bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide safe while breastfeeding?
- Reasoning mirrors pregnancy: systemic exposure after dermal application is plausible for retinoid derivatives and transfer into breastmilk is biologically plausible; no compound-specific breastfeeding data found. Mechanism same as pregnancy (retinoid receptor activity). Exposure scored moderate (e=2) given topical absorption; keep precautionary suspected hazard (h=2).
- Is bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide safe for baby skin?
- For infants (0–3 yr) increase exposure score by +1 because of immature barrier and higher surface-area-to-weight; thus e=3. Hazard (h=2) and mechanism (m=3) remain class-based suspected developmental/retinoid mechanism; no infant-specific safety data were found for this CAS. Use caution because retinoid exposure is more concerning in young children.
- How does VeriMom score bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide?
- VeriMom scores bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide at 27/100 (high risk) based on EU CosIng status, ECHA hazard classifications, and peer-reviewed PubMed studies. Our scoring pipeline is fully transparent.
- What are pregnancy-safe alternatives to bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide?
- See our curated list of pregnancy-safe alternatives to bis-retinoyl gerotine bis-hydroxysuccinimide based on similar function and a no-known-risks safety band.
Check every label in 2 seconds
Get VeriMom free — scan any product and see the pregnancy safety score instantly.
Medical Disclaimer
This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Safety scores are based on publicly available data and may not reflect all risks. Always consult your healthcare provider before using any product during pregnancy or breastfeeding.