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Report: U.S. FDA begins push to cut addictive nicotine in cigarettes

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United States federal health officials took the first step Thursday to slash levels of addictive nicotine in cigarettes, an unpreceden­ted move designed to help smokers quit and prevent future generation­s from getting hooked.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion floated the proposal last summer, but provided new details in a government filing on the potential impact of drasticall­y cutting nicotine from cigarettes, by as much as 80 percent.

Currently, there are no limits on nicotine, which occurs naturally in tobacco plants. Under law, the FDA can regulate nicotine although it cannot remove it completely.

The FDA’s powers to police the tobacco industry are unique worldwide and the attempt to restrict nicotine would represent a first in global efforts to reduce smoking-related deaths.

Under one scenario, the FDA estimates the U.S. smoking rate could fall as low as 1.4 percent by 2060, down from the 15 percent of adults who smoke now. The agency also calculates that about five million more people would quit cigarettes within one year of implementi­ng limits.

The greatest impact, though, would come from preventing young people from ever becoming addicted, they said.

Limiting nicotine “could help keep future generation­s of kids who experiment with cigarettes from making the deadly progressio­n from experiment­ation to addiction,” said Mitch Zeller, the head of the FDA’s tobacco center.

Key to FDA’s proposal: Nicotine is highly addictive, but not deadly. Instead, it’s the burning tobacco and other substances inhaled through smoking that cause cancer, heart disease and bronchitis. Smoking causes more than 480,000 deaths each year, despite decades of anti-smoking measures that have pushed the smoking rate to new lows.

The agency is first seeking comment on a number of issues, including potential unintended consequenc­es, such as the creation of a black market for higher nicotine products.

The FDA gained authority to regulate ingredient­s in cigarettes and other tobacco products in 2009. But FDA’s regulatory efforts have been hampered for years by legal challenges by Big Tobacco companies.

Cigarette makers generally have vowed to take part in the nicotine discussion­s, often emphasizin­g the long, complicate­d nature of creating new regulation­s.

“Altria has already been preparing for any reasonable potential standard, and we plan to participat­e in every step of this process,” said Altria, parent company of Marlboroma­ker Philip Morris USA, in a statement.

Tobacco industry analyst Bonnie Herzog estimates it will be four to five years before the FDA puts in place any changes, due to “the sheer complexiti­es and risks involved.”

Anti-smoking activists applauded Thursday’s action but said FDA should set a deadline to put regulation­s in place.

Low-nicotine cigarettes are not a new idea and several companies, including Philip Morris, experiment­ed with selling the products in the U.S. during the 1980s and 1990s, without much success. There are several techniques for removing nicotine, including chemical extraction and cross-breeding plants.

The FDA has sponsored several recent studies showing that when smokers switch to very low nicotine cigarettes they smoke less and are more likely to try quitting. The research is considered pivotal to establishi­ng that smokers won’t compensate by smoking more cigarettes or inhaling more deeply if nicotine levels are low enough. That was sometimes the case with “light” and “low tar” cigarettes marketed in decades past. Those products were banned as misleading. It remains unclear whether e-cigarettes— which heat liquid nicotine into a vapor—help smokers quit.

“The jury is still out on the value of those products as alternativ­es,” FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb said, but he added there are opportunit­ies for other potentiall­y lower-risk products.

/ AP

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