Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5856999 Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology 2012 24 Pages PDF
Abstract

Chemical analysis of up to 49 harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHC) in mainstream smoke, in vitro cytotoxicity of the particulate and gas/vapor phase of mainstream smoke determined in the Neutral Red Uptake assay, and in vitro bacterial mutagenicity of the particulate phase determined in the Salmonella typhimurium Reverse Mutation (Ames) assay are reported for three Electrically Heated Cigarette Smoking System (EHCSS) series-K cigarettes, the University of Kentucky Reference Cigarette 2R4F, and a number of comparator commercial conventional lit-end cigarettes (CC) under ISO machine-smoking conditions and a total of 25 additional smoking regimens reflecting 'human puffing behavior' (HPB). The smoking machines were set to deliver nicotine yields for the EHCSS and comparator CC derived from the 10th percentile to the 90th percentile of nicotine uptake distributions in smokers determined in two clinical studies. Duplication of the smoking intensity 'per cigarette' on a smoking machine may provide an insight into product performance that is directly relevant to obtaining scientific evidence for reduced exposure substantiation based on mainstream cigarette smoke HPHC-to-nicotine regressions. The reported data support an overall evaluation of reduced exposure to HPHC and biological activity.

► Electrically Heated Cigarette Smoking System (EHCSS) reduces smoke chemistry. ► Smoke chemistry assessed with 25 smoking regimens mimicking human puffing behavior. ► Particulate phase of EHCSS smoke has lower bacterial (Ames) mutagenicity. ► Gas and particulate phases of EHCSS smoke has lower cytotoxic activity. ► Toxicant-to-nicotine relationships mirror product performance as actually used.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Authors
, , , , , ,