The Columbus Dispatch

Vape products contain potentiall­y harmful chemicals, researcher­s say

- Tiffany Kary

Vaping exposes users to around 2,000 chemicals, including potentiall­y harmful industrial compounds, according to a study of four popular brands by researcher­s at Johns Hopkins University.

Most of the chemicals found were unidentified, but of those that were, six were cause for concern, according to the study published in Chemical Research in Toxicology, a peer-reviewed journal.

Researcher­s found condensed hydrocarbo­n-like compounds that are typically associated with traditiona­l combustion products like cigarettes, despite the fact that vaping is often marketed as safer than those products.

The study also found caffeine in some, which isn’t disclosed on labels.

E-liquids – a mixture of water, nicotine and other ingredient­s that are found in vaping products – and aerosols were studied for products sold by Juul Labs, British American Tobacco, ITG Brands and Mi-one Brands. The companies didn’t immediatel­y return messages seeking comment.

“People just need to know that they’re inhaling a very complex mixture of chemicals when they vape. And for a lot of these compounds, we have no idea what they actually are,” Carsten Prasse, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins and a senior author of the study, said in a statement.

Cigarette makers like BAT and Altria Group Inc., which owns a stake in Juul, are striving to convert smokers to nicotine alternativ­es such as e-cigarettes that they’ve framed as having reduced risk.

Regulators have yet to fully agree: The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has authorized some products for sale under the reduced-risk logic, but the agency is still reviewing thousands of applicatio­ns by e-cigarette makers to keep current products on the market.

To do so, companies need to prove that their products’ benefit for adult smokers outweighs the publicheal­th threat posed by youth use.

The Johns Hopkins study, which the FDA is reviewing, looked at only tobacco-flavored liquids.

Recent decisions from the FDA have determined that thousands of flavored products will need to be removed from the market.

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