Tobacco companies have increased
addictive
nicotine 11 percent over seven-year period
Newswise — A reanalysis of nicotine yield from major
brand
name cigarettes sold in Massachusetts from 1997 to
2005
has confirmed that manufacturers have steadily
increased the levels of this agent in cigarettes.
This independent analysis, based on data submitted
to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health ((MDPH)
by the manufacturers, found that increases in smoke
nicotine yield per cigarette averaged 1.6 percent
each year, or about 11 percent over a seven-year
period (1998-2005). Nicotine is the primary
addictive agent in cigarettes.
In addition to confirming the magnitude of the
increase, first reported in August, 2006 by MDPH,
researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health
(HSPH) extended the analysis to:
1) ascertain how manufacturers accomplished the
increase -- not only by intensifying the
concentration of nicotine in the tobacco but also by
modifying several design features of cigarettes to
increase the number of puffs per cigarette. The end
result is a product that is potentially more
addictive.
2) examine all market categories -- finding that
smoke nicotine yields were increased in the
cigarettes of each of the four major manufacturers
and across all the major cigarette market categories
(e.g. mentholated, non-mentholated, full-flavor,
light, ultralight).
Findings from the report "Trends in Smoke Nicotine
Yield and Relationship to Design Characteristics
Among Popular U.S. Cigarette Brands" will be
presented at Harvard School of Public Health, Bldg
3/Rm 203, on Thurs., Jan. 18, 2007, 12 p.m.. The
presentation is open to the media.
The analysis was performed by a research team from
the Tobacco Control Research Program at HSPH led by
program director Gregory Connolly, professor of the
practice of public health, and Howard Koh, associate
dean for public health practice at HSPH and a former
commissioner of public health for the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts (1997-2003). The other
co-investigators were HSPH researchers Hillel R.
Alpert and Geoffrey Ferris Wayne.
"Cigarettes are finely-tuned drug delivery devices,
designed to perpetuate a tobacco pandemic," said
former Commissioner Koh. "Yet precise information
about these products remains shrouded in secrecy,
hidden from the public. Policy actions today
requiring the tobacco industry to disclose critical
information about nicotine and product design could
protect the next generation from the tragedy of
addiction."
Said Connolly: "Our findings call into serious
question whether the tobacco industry has changed at
all in its pursuit of addicting smokers since
signing the Master Settlement Agreement of 1998 with
the State Attorneys General. Our analysis shows that
the companies have been subtly increasing the drug
nicotine year by year in their cigarettes, without
any warning to consumers, since the settlement.
Scrutiny by the Attorneys General is imperative.
Proposed federal legislation has been filed by
Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Ma.) that would address
this abuse and bring the tobacco industry under the
rules that regulate other manufacturers of drugs."
Beginning in 1997, Massachusetts regulations have
required an annual report to be filed with the MDPH
by all manufacturers of cigarettes sold in
Massachusetts. The reported data include
machine-based measures of nicotine yield as well as
measures of cigarette design related to nicotine
delivery.
The Tobacco Research Program at HSPH obtained from
the MDPH a complete set of brand-specific data from
1997 to 2005 and analyzed trends in smoke nicotine
yield.
The discovery of an 11 percent increase in nicotine
content, said Connolly, confirms recent statements
by the US District Court for the District of
Columbia that manufacturers have the ability to
manipulate addictive additives, and, he said, "it
underscores the need for continued surveillance of
nicotine delivery in products created by an
unregulated industry."
In an opinion in US vs. Philip Morris USA et. al.
Judge Gladys Kessler wrote that tobacco companies
"can and do control the level of nicotine delivered
in order to create and sustain addiction" and
further, that the "goal to ensure that their
products deliver sufficient nicotine to create and
sustain addiction influences their selection and
combination of design parameters."
Cigarette smoking causes an estimated 438,000
premature deaths (or about 1 of every 5 deaths)
annually in the U.S., and approximately 900,000
persons become addicted to smoking each year.
In conclusion, according to the HSPH researchers,
the extended analysis of MDPH data has demonstrated
its potential to reveal undisclosed hazards to human
health. They suggest that MDPH amend its unique
reporting requirements to include more information
about cigarette and smokeless tobacco product design
features that affect nicotine delivery - as well as
testing of a sample of brands for the actual
delivery of nicotine to the body.
Work on the report was supported by funds from The
American Legacy Foundation and the National Cancer
Institute.
Harvard School of Public Health is dedicated to
advancing the public's health through learning,
discovery, and communication. More than 300 faculty
members are engaged in teaching and training the
900-plus student body in a broad spectrum of
disciplines crucial to the health and well being of
individuals and populations around the world.
Programs and projects range from the molecular
biology of AIDS vaccines to the epidemiology of
cancer; from risk analysis to violence prevention;
from maternal and children's health to quality of
care measurement; from health care management to
international health and human rights.