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Short-Term Exposure Evaluation of Adult Smokers Switching From Conventional to First-Generation Electrically Heated Cigarettes During Controlled Smoking

This randomized, controlled study in 110 male and female adult smokers evaluated biomarkers of tobacco smoke exposure (carbon monoxide [CO], carboxyhemoglobin [CO‐Hb], nicotine, urine mutagenicity) under controlled smoking conditions when adult smokers of 1 conventional cigarette brand (CC1) were sw...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of clinical pharmacology 2005-02, Vol.45 (2), p.133-145
Main Authors: Roethig, Hans J., Kinser, Robin D., Lau, Raymond W., Walk, Ruediger-A., Wang, Nancy
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This randomized, controlled study in 110 male and female adult smokers evaluated biomarkers of tobacco smoke exposure (carbon monoxide [CO], carboxyhemoglobin [CO‐Hb], nicotine, urine mutagenicity) under controlled smoking conditions when adult smokers of 1 conventional cigarette brand (CC1) were switched to an electrically heated cigarette smoking system (EHCSS) or a low‐tar conventional cigarette (CC2). Baseline exposure was determined while all subjects smoked CC1. Subjects then were stratified for gender and cigarette consumption and randomized to 1 of 5 groups—EHCSS1, EHCSS2, CC1, CC2, or no smoking—and monitored for 8 days. Compared to baseline, biomarkers of exposure on day 8 decreased 53% to 93% (P < .0001) for EHCSS groups and 18% to 39% (P < .02) for CC2. Environmental tobacco smoke arising from the smoking activities of the different study groups was measured in the air of a separate smoking room over 1‐hour periods. Concentrations of respirable suspended particulates in both EHCSS groups were about 90% lower than in the CC1 and CC2 groups, similar to the 95% reduction in the no‐smoking group. CO was undetectable in the EHCSS and no‐smoking groups. Results from this short‐term clinical study indicate that switching from a conventional cigarette to a first‐generation EHCSS reduces the generation of environmental tobacco smoke and can reduce the exposure to the measured, potentially harmful constituents in tobacco smoke if smokers do not compensate by numbers of cigarettes. The study design was found to be suitable for the evaluation of the exposure of adult smokers to the measured smoke constituents and to allow the differentiation of different cigarette designs.
ISSN:0091-2700
1552-4604
DOI:10.1177/0091270004271253