Campaigners target Philip Morris' flagship heated tobacco US launch
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[July 16, 2024]
By Emma Rumney
LONDON (Reuters) - Health campaigners have written to U.S. regulators
accusing Philip Morris International of misrepresenting past regulatory
decisions, seeking to disrupt the launch of its flagship heated tobacco
device IQOS in the United States.
The world's biggest tobacco company by market value has spent billions
of dollars developing the product, which investors see as key to driving
future growth. But it needs permission from the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration to sell it in the world's second largest tobacco market
by revenue.
Six anti-tobacco and health groups, including the Campaign for
Tobacco-Free Kids, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American
Lung Association, wrote to the FDA to oppose IQOS-related applications
PMI has submitted to the agency.
"PMI has repeatedly made misleading and deceptive statements wrongly
suggesting that the FDA has found that IQOS reduces the risk of
disease," the letter, dated June 27 and reviewed by Reuters, said.
The campaign groups allege that PMI violated the FDA's orders by
suggesting IQOS offered lower risks than cigarettes. Their letter cited
four examples of such statements in the United States, the Philippines,
Mexico and Kazakhstan.
They also said in the letter that upcoming independent studies
contradict PMI's findings about how many IQOS users completely switch to
the device from cigarettes.
Presentations on the studies from the International Tobacco Control
Project (ITC) at Canada's University of Waterloo are attached to the
letter as exhibits.
They show the ITC found a far lower rate of IQOS users had quit smoking
in Japan and Korea than estimates from PMI.
These factors "directly bear on whether PMI should be permitted to
market IQOS" in the United States, the campaigners' letter said.
The contents of the letter have not been previously reported.
Asked by Reuters to respond to the letter, a PMI spokesperson said the
company was proud to discuss the FDA's conclusions on IQOS.
The spokesperson did not address each example but said some of the
language flagged by campaigners was, in the company's view, compatible
with the FDA's orders.
"Wherever we discuss our science and our products, we do so in
accordance with all applicable laws," the spokesperson said.
Reuters could not determine whether the campaigners' letter would change
the FDA's approach to IQOS. The agency said it had received the letter
and would respond directly to the senders. It did not comment further.
Devices like IQOS heat up sticks of ground tobacco without burning them
in an attempt to avoid the harmful chemicals released via combustion.
The FDA first authorised PMI to sell an older version of IQOS in 2019.
It subsequently authorised the company to market it as offering reduced
exposure to harmful chemicals versus cigarettes for smokers who
completely switch - known as an "exposure modification order".
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Philip Morris new IQOS 3 devices are displayed during a news
conference by its International's CEO Andre Calantzopoulos in Tokyo,
Japan, October 23, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
The FDA can also issue a "risk
modification order", authorising a company to claim its product
reduces the risk of tobacco-related harm and disease. But this is
harder to prove, especially without long-term, epidemiological
studies.
The FDA rejected PMI's previous application to say its older IQOS
device results in reduced health risks, saying there wasn't
sufficient evidence to support this.
PMI applied in 2023 to renew its existing exposure modification
orders. Later that year, it also applied to sell and market a newer
version of the IQOS device in the same way. The FDA has yet to
decide on these applications.
Marketing the product as having health benefits compared to
traditional cigarettes could help PMI persuade consumers to switch
as well as afford it tax benefits versus cigarettes in some U.S.
states.
SWITCH RATES
The campaign groups also cited preliminary data from ITC studies in
Japan and Korea, saying it contradicted PMI's findings about how
many IQOS users completely switch from cigarettes.
The studies have been presented at academic conferences but have not
yet been submitted for publication in a journal, ITC researchers
told Reuters. As a result, study abstracts have been peer reviewed
but the full findings have yet to go through that process.
Japan is IQOS' largest market and the introduction of heated tobacco
there coincided with an accelerated decline in cigarette sales.
PMI estimates more than seven out of 10 of its registered IQOS
customers globally have quit cigarettes. A 2023 PMI application to
the FDA emphasised that the majority of IQOS users were using IQOS
exclusively.
However, the ITC's researchers put the percentage of all IQOS users
that had quit smoking at just 15% in Japan and 30% in Korea in 2021.
Users most commonly used IQOS and cigarettes simultaneously, known
as "dual use", often leading to an overall increase in tobacco
consumption, the ITC researchers found.
PMI pointed to a 2019 Japanese government health survey, where 75%
of respondents who reported using heated tobacco said they did not
smoke.
However, a paper published this year, led by researchers from
Georgetown University, highlighted flaws in the government's survey,
including changes to the question format that can lead to
under-reporting of smoking.
Other surveys have also found higher rates of dual use than the
government, it said.
(Reporting by Emma Rumney; Editing by Matt Scuffham and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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