I went to the websites for Pfizer and Merck and did a search for propylene glycol. The results were rather surprising. Merck manufactures an inhaled, anti-rejection drug for lung transplant recipients that contains PG. Pfizer adds PG to numerous medications including Motrin, Zyrtec and an antibiotic vaginal cream. I searched for PG on GSK and J&J websites but nothing showed up. Pfizer also uses PG and shellac in the ink they use to print the dosage on Detrol LA pills! I doubt that info is listed on the patient information the pharmacy hands out. I also found PG listed as an inactive ingredient for one of the asthma/COPD inhalers but can't find the reference now and can't remember which drug - It was in a paper on the FDA's website. There is also paper on the FDA's website (dealing with the Merck anti-rejection drug) that points to the safety record of PG dating back to the 1940's in urging the FDA to approve the drug.
The FDA's website also lists some watches/alerts for PG products that are contaminated by DEG. This is apparently not an uncommon thing. My only concern is that most of the watch/alert products are manufactured in China, which probably does not enforce strict standards of quality control like the US does.
The point of all of this is that the information on PG is out there but it isn't easy to find. The only way we can decide for ourselves whether this is something we should be using is to educate ourselves.
The FDA's website also lists some watches/alerts for PG products that are contaminated by DEG. This is apparently not an uncommon thing. My only concern is that most of the watch/alert products are manufactured in China, which probably does not enforce strict standards of quality control like the US does.
The point of all of this is that the information on PG is out there but it isn't easy to find. The only way we can decide for ourselves whether this is something we should be using is to educate ourselves.