Yorkshire Post

Cigarettes’ ventilated filters ‘may increase cancer risk’

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SO-CALLED “LIGHT” cigarettes with ventilated filters may have made smokers more vulnerable to what is now the most common form of lung cancer, scientists have warned.

Researcher­s investigat­ed why rates of adenocarci­noma, a cancer that occurs deep in the lungs, had risen over the last 50 years.

During same period, the number of people developing other forms of lung cancer had fallen in relation to more smokers quitting tobacco.

The results confirmed what many experts had long suspected – a “clear relationsh­ip” was seen between rising rates of adenocarci­noma and greater demand for “light” cigarettes. Cigarettes with tiny holes in their filters were introduced 50 years ago and vigorously marketed as a healthier “low tar” option.

Dr Peter Shields, from Ohio State University in the US, who led the new research, said: “This was done to fool smokers and the public health community into thinking that they were safer.

“Our data suggests a clear relationsh­ip between the addition of ventilatio­n holes to cigarettes and increasing rates of lung adenocarci­noma seen over the past 20 years.

“What is especially concerning is that these holes are still added to virtually all cigarettes that are smoked today.”

It is now illegal to label cigarette packets with the words “light” or “low tar” both in the US and the UK.

But the study authors say regulators such as the US Food and Drugs Administra­tion (FDA) should now ban the use of cigarette filter ventilatio­n holes.

The scientists conducted an analysis of research including clinical trials, epidemiolo­gical studies, and toxilogica­l investigat­ions which included internal tobacco company documents.

Filter ventilatio­n holes allow smokers to inhale more smoke containing higher levels of cancer-causing chemicals and other toxins, they believe.

The findings are reported in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. More research is needed to confirm that banning ventilatio­n holes would not increase the addictiven­ess of cigarettes or exposure to toxic chemicals, said the scientists.

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