So-called "heat-not-burn" devices are designed to heat disposable
tobacco sticks and give users the taste of tobacco without the smoke
or ash.
For the study, researchers analyzed data submitted by Philip Morris
International to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration when the
company was trying to win regulatory approval to market its
I-Quit-Ordinary Smoking (IQOS) product as a safer alternative to
traditional cigarettes.
The FDA has yet to weigh in on whether Philip Morris can sell its
IQOS device as a lower-risk cigarette alternative. But an expert
scientific panel convened by the FDA recommended against such a move
earlier this year, and the new study offers fresh evidence of health
risks associated with IQOS.
When smokers switched from traditional cigarettes to "heat-not-burn"
devices, researchers didn't find any evidence of improvements in
lung function or reductions in inflammation that can signal
tobacco-related blood vessel damage.
"Even if a patient could switch completely from regular cigarettes
to heat-not-burn products, Philip Morris International's own data
shows that there will continue to be significant health risks
associated with these products," said lead study author Dr. Farzad
Moazed of the University of California, San Francisco.
"Although quitting smoking is challenging, there are many other
options for smoking cessation that are more effective and safer than
the use of these products," Moazed said by email.
There is evidence that IQOS may reduce exposure to certain harmful
chemicals, Moazed said, a point Philip Morris emphasized in a
statement released after the FDA advisory panel decision. (http://bit.ly/2O0S42z)
Philip Morris also disputed the study authors' conclusions.
"The totality of evidence available on IQOS supports that it is
likely to present less risk of harm compared to continued smoking,”
Philip Morris said in an emailed statement to Reuters Health. "This
includes a significant reduction in inflammatory response and
favorable changes in lung function." (http://bit.ly/2QPuiVF)
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"Heated tobacco products, also known as heat-not-burn products,
generate a nicotine aerosol by heating sticks made up of tobacco and
other chemicals without lighting them on fire," Moazed said. "While
this reduces the amount of some of the harmful chemicals associated
with smoking, it increases the levels of other chemicals, and the
evidence to date shows that these products continue to result in
harm."
While there's limited data on the safety of IQOS relative to
traditional cigarettes, and no long-term studies, the available
evidence suggests that the devices are just as harmful to the lungs
and immune system as traditional cigarettes, Moazed's team concludes
in Tobacco Control.
It's also unclear from research to date whether IQOS might help
smokers quit, a factor that might influence how scientists think
about the safety of these devices and other tobacco products sold as
alternatives to traditional cigarettes.
The human studies Philip Morris submitted to the FDA excluded people
who were "dual users" of both traditional cigarettes and IQOS
devices, the study authors note.
Any safety advantage relative to traditional cigarettes might be
diminished if people continue to smoke traditional cigarettes once
they start using IQOS devices, said Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, a
tobacco prevention researcher at Stanford University School of
Medicine in Palo Alto, California, who wasn't involved in the study.
"We have no studies outside of Philip Morris on whether these IQOS
will actually help people quit or on their relative safety,"
Halpern-Felsher added. "People are unlikely to understand what
"switching completely" means and that therefore they are likely to
be misled," by any safety claims that are contingent on smoking
cessation.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2NVTxXY Tobacco Control, online August 27,
2018.
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