Elsevier

Preventive Medicine

Volume 26, Issue 4, July 1997, Pages 435-440
Preventive Medicine

Regular Article
Nicotine Regulates Smoking Patterns

https://doi.org/10.1006/pmed.1997.0184Get rights and content

Abstract

Background.Since 1953, the sales-weighted average “tar” and nicotine yields of commercial cigarettes in developed countries have significantly declined. However, the risk for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and for cancer of the lung has not decreased; adenocarcinoma incidence even continues to rise faster than the rate of squamous cell carcinoma of the lung. Undiminished risk of cigarette smokers for COPD and lung cancer is largely due to more intense smoking and deeper inhalation of the smoke of “low-yield” cigarettes and to significant changes in the smoke yields of certain lung carcinogens.

Methods.Puff frequency, puff duration, and puff volume of cigarette smokers were determined by a microcomputer-assisted flow transducer. These parameters were then programmed into a smoking machine to generate mainstream smoke for quantifying nicotine and lung carcinogens.

Results.Simulating the human smoking characteristics increases the yields of “tar” and nicotine per cigarette two- to threefold above Federal Trade Commission-reported levels. Smoke yields of lung carcinogens like benzo[a]pyrene and 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone parallel those of nicotine and “tar.”

Conclusions.The way people smoke and the total number of cigarettes consumed daily determine the uptake, i.e., the administered dose of nicotine, other toxic, and genotoxic smoke constituents. It is important to communicate this to consumers rather than letting the smokers believe that they are truly smoking a cigarette of lower smoke yields when they choose “light” or “ultralight” products.

References (29)

  • EL Hammond et al.

    “Tar” and nicotine content of cigarette smoke in relation to the death rates

    Environ Res

    (1976)
  • R Doll et al.

    Smoking and carcinoma of the lung: preliminary report

    Br Med J

    (1950)
  • EL Wynder et al.

    Tobacco smoking as a possible etiologic factor in bronchiogenic carcinoma: a study of six hundred and eighty-four proved cases

    J Am Med Assoc

    (1950)
  • EL Wynder et al.

    Experimental production of carcinoma with cigarette tar

    Cancer Res

    (1953)
  • EL Wynder et al.

    Tobacco and tobacco smoke: studies in experimental carcinogenesis

    (1967)
  • D Hoffmann et al.

    Changes in cigarette design and composition over time and how they influence the yields of smoke constituents

    J Smoking Relat Disord

    (1995)
  • I DJ Bross et al.

    Risk of lung cancer in smokers who switch to filter cigarettes

    Am J Public Health

    (1968)
  • EL Wynder et al.

    The epidemiology of lung cancer: recent trends

    J Am Med Assoc

    (1970)
  • EL Wynder et al.

    The impact of long-term filter cigarette usage on lung and larynx cancer risk: a case-control study

    J Natl Cancer Inst

    (1979)
  • JH Lubin et al.

    Patterns of lung cancer risk according to type of cigarette smoked

    Int J Cancer

    (1984)
  • IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risk of Chemicals to Humans

    (1986)
  • L Garfinkel

    Selection, follow-up and analysis in the American Cancer Society prospective studies

    Monogr Natl Cancer Inst

    (1985)
  • MJ Thun et al.

    Excess mortality among cigarette smokers: changes in a 20-year interval

    Am J Public Health

    (1995)
  • SS Devesa et al.

    Changing patterns of lung cancer incidence by histological type

    Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev

    (1991)
  • Cited by (0)

    This study is funded by Grants CA-29580 and PO1 CA-68384-01 from the National Cancer Institute.

    2

    To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed at the American Health Foundation, 1 Dana Road, Valhalla, New York 10595. Fax: (914) 592-6317.

    View full text