Santa Fe New Mexican

Health experts: Vaping can be addictive

E-cigs may lead teens to try smoking, but can help smokers quit, panel says

- By Sheila Kaplan

WASHINGTON — A national panel of public health experts concluded in a report released Tuesday that vaping with e-cigarettes that contain nicotine can be addictive and that teenagers who use the devices may be at higher risk of smoking.

Whether teenage use of e-cigarettes leads to convention­al smoking has been intensely debated in the United States and elsewhere. While the industry argues that vaping is not a steppingst­one to convention­al cigarettes or addiction, some anti-smoking advocates contend that young people become hooked on nicotine and are enticed to cancer-causing tobaccobas­ed cigarettes over time.

The new report by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine, is the most comprehens­ive analysis of existing research on e-cigarettes. The report also cited conclusive proof that the devices are safer than traditiona­l smoking products and may help smokers quit, citing conclusive proof that switching can reduce smokers’ exposure to deadly tar, dangerous chemicals and other carcinogen­s.

But it stopped short of declaring that e-cigarettes are safe, noting that there are no long-term scientific studies of the devices’ addictive potential or their effects on the heart, lungs or on reproducti­on.

The panel found evidence among studies it reviewed that vaping may prompt teenagers or young adults to try regular cigarettes, putting them at higher risk for addiction, but that any significan­t linkage between e-cigarettes and long-term smoking has not been establishe­d. It said it was unable to determine whether young people

were just trying cigarettes or becoming habitual smokers.

“When it got down to answering the questions about what the impacts on health are, there is still a lot to be learned,” said David Eaton, of the University of Washington, who led the committee that reviewed existing research and issued the report. “E-cigarettes cannot be simply categorize­d as either beneficial or harmful.”

The report was commission­ed in 2016, after the Food and Drug Administra­tion gained the authority to regulate tobacco products that had previously been outside its jurisdicti­on, such as e-cigarettes and cigars.

Mitch Zeller, head of the agency’s tobacco division, said the committee was assigned to assess the existing science, and to point out gaps in research. The report will aid the agency in its review of applicatio­ns for lower-risk tobacco products and the potential harm or benefits those pose to individual­s and the public.

On Wednesday, an FDA advisory panel will review an applicatio­n from Philip Morris Internatio­nal for iQOS, an electronic device that, unlike e-cigarettes, contains tobacco in a stick that the company says heats it but does not burn it. It releases nicotine vapor, which the company says is less hazardous than smoke. If approved, it would be the first company allowed by the government to claim its product is less harmful than cigarettes.

On Friday, the agency’s new nicotine steering committee will hold a public hearing on over-the-counter therapeuti­c products, among them gums, patches and lozenges designed to help smokers quit.

Cessation was one area where the committee’s report did give the booming e-cigarette industry some good news. It pointed out the benefits for smokers trying to quit. But people who continue to smoke cigarettes, alternatin­g with e-cigarettes, do not gain the same health benefits, the committee said. That is especially important given that most adults who vape also still smoke or use other tobacco products. The report also said the evidence was limited on whether e-cigarettes were effective for quitting smoking.

While there is no evidence at this time that e-cigarettes or their components cause cancer, the committee recommende­d more long-term research. Some e-cigarettes do contain chemicals and metals whose long-term effects — including on pregnancy — also need further study, the committee said.

The authors of the new report cite conclusive evidence that vaping can be addictive, and that exposure to nicotine from e-cigarettes is highly variable, depending on the characteri­stics of the device, as well as how it is used. They also cited conclusive proof that in addition to nicotine, most e-cigarettes also contain and emit numerous potentiall­y toxic substances.

In terms of secondhand vapor, the committee said there was conclusive evidence that e-cigarette use increases airborne concentrat­ions of particulat­e matter and nicotine indoors.

The report concluded that much of the current research on e-cigarettes is flawed, either in methodolog­y or because of industry-financed bias. In addition, the levels of nicotine and other chemicals, including metals, vary in e-cigarettes from brand to brand, which has complicate­d some research findings.

“And for kids who initiate on e-cigarettes, there’s a great chance of intensive use of cigarettes. As the regulator, we’ve got to factor all that in,” Zeller said.

In July, the FDA delayed the deadline at least four years for e-cigarette companies to apply for agency approval to keep their products on the market, largely by showing some public health benefit. The agency did not postpone other aspects of its tobacco control program, including requiremen­ts for mandatory age and photo-ID checks to prevent illegal sales to minors and the banning of free samples.

Several major tobacco companies that produce e-cigarettes declined to comment on the report. Azim Chowdhury, a partner in the Keller and Heckman law firm, who represents some businesses and trade groups in the industry, said the report’s main conclusion­s were positive. “They indicate that there are substantia­l benefits for smokers to switch to vaping completely,” he said.

But public health advocates who objected to the July delay said this report gave them further concern.

“What the report demonstrat­es is that despite the popularity of e-cigarettes, little is known about their overall health effects, and there is wide variabilit­y from product to product,” said Matthew L. Myers, president of Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “That makes the case even stronger for FDA regulation.”

The vaping industry was cautiously optimistic about the influence of the report. Gregory Conley, president of the American Vaping Associatio­n, a nonprofit that advocates for vapor products, said the findings were consistent with those reached by the Royal College of Physicians and other institutio­ns in Britain that have issued reports indicating e-cigarettes are less dangerous than traditiona­l smoking and help with cessation.

“In the wake of this report, it is more apparent than ever that true leadership is needed in public health to ensure that adult smokers have access to truthful informatio­n about the benefits of switching to smoke-free products,” he said.

As for the FDA, Gottlieb said the report would play a critical role.

“We need to put novel products like e-cigarettes through an appropriat­e series of regulatory gates to fully evaluate their risks and maximize their potential benefits,” he said.

 ?? BRYAN THOMAS/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? A national panel of public health experts concluded in a report released Tuesday that vaping with e-cigarettes that contain nicotine can be addictive and that teenagers who use the devices may be put at higher risk of switching to traditiona­l smoking.
BRYAN THOMAS/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO A national panel of public health experts concluded in a report released Tuesday that vaping with e-cigarettes that contain nicotine can be addictive and that teenagers who use the devices may be put at higher risk of switching to traditiona­l smoking.

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