Philip Morris
Toward Less Hazardous Cigarettes
Fields
- Author
- Warner, K.E.
- Type
- MAGA, MAGAZINE ARTICLE
- Author (Organization)
- Univ of Mi
- Master ID
- 2063628473/8882
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- Litigation
- Iwoh/Produced
- Site
- R530
- Named Person
- Gori, G.
- Lynch, C.J.
- Characteristic
- EXTR, EXTRA
- ILLE, ILLEGIBLE
- Area
- CARCHMAN,RICHARD/OFFICE
- Date Loaded
- 07 Jun 1999
- UCSF Legacy ID
- bvg81a00
Document Images
bgen qrea~ent
igaretteaWd Icnow of no
ntiflt evidenue that today's addi-
aesinereasethe toxicity of aigarette
and tive have uncovered no
ei~idence thus far in ongoing
t dysea of the'Smoking and Health
However, , this remains a'
j,~iiity tltat futpre inveBtigations
tl6alify.
)tHomburger states that only an
~civ8 bioassay of amoke itself, as'
~dded by fiuman smokers, can
secriiminate between hazardous and
'
Ss har,ar . us cigarettes. We agree.
tia ie -Why the Smoking and Health
am conducts studies of human
iokers on an international basis.
ever, it takes 15 or more yeitrs to
mulate sufficient applicable data
i meaningful analyses. In the mean-
ms, we believe that agradualreduc-
m in exposure to toxic c~wtituents,
®uggested in our paper, is a reason-
approach for the millions of
okers who persiaY'm their habit
espi.te its 3cho / adverse health
Coeta.:._. ._..~.. ~.
- do B. Fioa. PrO
T~ ".ft
: lhpoa.l pntIDrtu m HqM
e+~n..a.. Md
ob~.J. Lvxq6 PHD
,'-6Mmcairod,M4 ,.
amHw., /
~ . ~'m'~k`'' rora a~4/ Tolnm
aa c..... t a..wva
Nw Yrci..Wde®ic in pp
pt~.p
ElLatioe 7,7NE87-10y/ !!abik Hu1W
wwd tass. ttazerd4us,
~e~l~tor, in a reeefit iasue of
x I n1 yt c[, Gio Go~ and
I ynCh PhD ~t on
~ lsvels of ejected,. nSai~taents : . . in
,~.,.
~tay1960 cigaretfe:d" at a
een@ume an ` ot `isj=
mortality , -
tl~at of a namoker
~i~levele tranalated
num of piresent-
~iaep ? dzarpttRS in
ormgtion;to,helg.
.--
ouailenm't3ie validity o~ r aouclu- I
aiou Here 3:will note ~two such
5s6umptions. '' .. . . .
First, the vast majoritqof curren,t.
reguiat (eg. pgcic~ake~ fii=
bale. ~ienee, for a meaningful com=
parison between present-day low tar
and nicotine cigarette smokingait$
the pre 1960 ingestion' of ~gmoke con-
stituents,. the latteYmust be aapoci=
ated with inhalation. Yet, assuming
inhalation, as the authors implicitly
have -done,se,ems unreasonable.
Smokers of'on~'.sr two Cigarettes~per
day often Oo not inhale. Many of
those who,do soon become regulaz
heavier) smokers an~l. henee d~ep dt
of the,two-a-day clasa._Consequently,
their increased risks also drop out of
the data the authors have examined:
For a meaningful co{nparison, a
necessary (alldfoughnot sufficient)
condition is'that the authors study a
cohort of smokers who (1) smoked for
a long period (preferably lifetime), (2)
never d~aviated substantially from
-theirtao-a-day habits, and (3) always
inhaled.-From correspondence with
the authors, I know that they have
not met this necessary condition.
The second problem also relates to
smoking histories. Many current low
tar and nicotine cigarette smokers
have switched from lengthy histories
of high tar and nicotine cigarette
smoking. If many of the pne-1960 two-
Cigsrettes-a-day, smokersiwere never
heavier smokers, are the relative
health risks of the two groups direct-
"ly comparable? The authbrs' implicit
assumption is that they are; both
scientific evidence and logic suggest
otherwise.
It is important to note, as Dr Gori
observed in a personal communica- tively few such smokers in tb,e gener-
tion, that the authors were "address- ai population. However, an ongoing
ing the general smoking population, epidemiologic study sponsored by the
not'specific subgroups. The effects of National Cancer Institute's Smoking
smoking on an individual depend ... and .4-Iealth Program in eight US
on several factors." Thus, even if one cities has found that-of 274 two-a-day
believed the authors' analysis, it says smokers, 157 (57%) inhale. A similar
nothing about the relative risks of study in Western Europe' has thus
certain high-risk groups, such as far identified only 47 two-a-day
women who are pregnant or taking smokers, but 29 (62%) of them inhale:
birth control pills, asbestos workers, Although the sample sizes of these
and personp with histories of cardio- studies are small, we believe they
.r probleme. _ represent some of the most oomtpre-
purpese 3s writing is. not to. he~SSive data aviiiable on t}gs inhala-
queatlen the hasic premises that tion praetadsa of t~ro-n d~ s]noierd.
underlie the study-that b'.urther, reslwn~a#stp~atrmoev ainokfng low karniaoCSno ciRa-
fapit8eiris u~a}st~lb n
'~"
Gorl a contztSUmg efforW to
and promote less haxardous a
materialsandbehaviors A'ndlreeogs
nize that throughout hia`v+ark; he-$s
cateful to avoid the texm 'safe" ciga-.
rettes-and that be and Dr yneh
aeknowludgVthfit.,nven the "~tica
levels" of smoking "could ptiU.imply ,
an important risk," alll}ou~h` they.
-believe "it may be ,flitficult , to
detect."
Like the authors, Iregret the lay-media's predictable miaintegpretation
of the researdh, which mayAconesiX. '.
ably induce potential quitters;-to
adopt an alternative smoking behav-
ior having deleterious healtbopnse-
quences. I also regret that, for Cheir
professlonal audience, the authors
failed to qualify theirfindingA ade-
quately by emphasizing their critical
dependence on highly questionable
assumptions. The Gori-Lynch article
offers some interesting calculations. -
But it does not provide any scientifi- -
cally meaningful evidence that cer-
tain present-day smoking behaviors
will result in statistically nondetect- -
able health risks. I hope that physi-
cians will keep this in mind.aa.they.
counsel their patients onthe conse=
quences of cigarette smoking.
Kw.[p E. W~. PHO
UnHa,iM/ of N4~Ipm---
' sqwoi ol PuElk iN.IM
Mn Arber
In Reply.-We appreciate Dr War-
ner's perceptive- c9mments oil_-0urrecent article in '1'Its Jooxx,u.. Dr
Warner states that it is unreasonable
to assume that the majority of` two-
a-day smokers inhale. Scientific data
on inhalation practicea. two-a-day
smokers are sparse, because la-
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