Is lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate safe during pregnancy?
Reviewed by VeriMom Editorial Team · Last reviewed
Pregnancy-Safe Ingredients Database — 28,000+ Ingredients Rated
lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate
NO KNOWN RISKS100
/100
0









Pregnancy-safe products containing lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate

LACTO-DERM
LACTO-DERM Beneficial Moisturizing Lotion
99/100

Skin79
Skin79 Water Biome Hydra Night Back Up Cream
98/100

Abib
Abib Glutathiosome Dark Spot Pad (1ea) X Rice Probiotics Overnight Mask (1ea) Set
98/100

Skin79
Skin79 Water Biome Hydra Day Set Up Cream
98/100

LACTO-DERM
LACTO-DERM Beneficial Moisturizing Skin Wash
98/100

Barulab
Barulab Cocoon Cleansing Foam
98/100

Skin79
Skin79 Water Biome Hydra Jelly Mask
98/100

Swanicoco
Swanicoco Pro Biome Body Wash
98/100

Skin79
Skin79 Water Biome Hydra Eye Cream
98/100

Skin79
Skin79 Water Biome Hydra Foam Cleanser
98/100
Related ingredients
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Sources & references
Authoritative references used to score this ingredient.
Frequently asked questions
- Is lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate safe during pregnancy?
- No harmonised CLP classification, no CIR or SCCS reproductive safety flags, and no peer‑reviewed evidence of reproductive or teratogenic effects from topical Lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate. Typical ingredient is a filtrate of fermented milk (bacterial metabolites, peptides) with no CAS and no specific toxicology indicating reproductive hazard (sources: ECHA Annex VI—no entry/harmonised classification; CIR—no assessment found; PubMed—no reproductive toxicity reports).
- Is lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate safe while breastfeeding?
- No evidence of reproductive or lactation-specific toxicity. Topical application of bacterial/milk ferment filtrates is not reported to cause systemic reproductive toxicity or to concentrate in breastmilk; no regulatory flags (ECHA Annex VI, CIR) or peer‑reviewed reports indicating risk to nursing infants.
- Is lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate safe for baby skin?
- Hazard and mechanism: no data indicating developmental or reproductive toxicity specific to infants. Exposure: infant skin has a less mature barrier and higher surface‑area‑to‑weight ratio, so topical exposure is more likely to result in measurable absorption than in adults; therefore exposure score increased by +1 (adult e=0 → infant e=1). No evidence supports increasing hazard or mechanism scores for 0–3 yr olds (sources: general dermal absorption principles, lack of ingredient-specific reproductive/toxicity data in PubMed/COSIng).
- How does VeriMom score lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate?
- VeriMom scores lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate at 100/100 (no known risks) 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 lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate?
- See our curated list of pregnancy-safe alternatives to lactobacillus/milk ferment filtrate based on similar function and a no-known-risks safety band.
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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.