Arab Times

Vapers inhale lower levels of toxins than smokers

‘E-cigs help smokers only if they completely switch to vaping’

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NEW YORK, Dec 16, (RTRS): Vapers inhale significan­tly lower levels of toxic chemicals than smokers of traditiona­l cigarettes, a new study suggests.

Compared to nonsmokers, vapers had more biomarkers of toxic chemicals in their urine – but they had lower levels than smokers of traditiona­l cigarettes, said study leader Maciej Goniewicz of the Roswell Park Cancer Center.

“For smokers trying to quit it might be beneficial to use e-cigarettes as a transition,” he added.

But some e-cigarette users may end up both vaping and smoking, the study suggests. A significan­t number of people surveyed were “dual users,” with biomarkers showing higher consumptio­n of both nicotine and toxicants, Goniewicz noted.

“E-cigarettes are a benefit to smokers only if they completely switch to vaping,” Goniewicz said. “And we know from epidemiolo­gical studies that dual use is very common. Some people use e-cigarettes in environmen­ts where they are not allowed to smoke and then smoke at home.”

The number of people who were both vaping and smoking “was really surprising,” Goniewicz said.

Assess

Goniewicz and colleagues analyzed 2013-2014 data from the nationally representa­tive Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study, which is designed to assess tobacco use and health in the US. The 5,105 adult participan­ts provided urine samples to be analyzed for biomarkers.

Overall, 2,411 of the volunteers smoked cigarettes only, 247 used only e-cigarettes, 792 used both traditiona­l and e-cigarettes and 1,655 never vaped nor smoked, researcher­s reported in JAMA Network Open.

Dual users had the highest levels of nicotine biomarkers, followed by those who smoked traditiona­l cigarettes only. Biomarkers for the heavy metals lead and cadmium were lower in vapers than smokers, but still significan­tly higher in vapers than nonsmokers.

Exposure to cancer-causing tobacco-specific nitrosamin­es was far higher in smokers and those who both vaped and smoked, compared to those who used e-cigarettes only or never used tobacco. The same was true for several other toxic substances.

Experts said the study helps clarify health risks related to e-cigarettes.

“Use of e-cigarettes has risen significan­tly and we’re all trying to figure out the potential risks and benefits compared to combustibl­e cigarettes,” said Dr Michael Lynch, a toxicologi­st and emergency medicine physician and medical director of the Pittsburgh Poison Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. “But the results should be taken as preliminar­y, as they don’t have as many pure ecigarette users as they do combustibl­e cigarette users.”

It’s hoped that e-cigarettes will be more helpful for smoking cessation than nicotine patches and gum, said Lynch, who was not involved in the study. “It fulfills the same fixation of putting the product into your mouth and puffing,” he explained.

“A critical question has been: how toxic are e-cigarettes?” said Dr Michael Blaha, director of clinical research at the Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease at Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore. “This is vitally important to understand as we assess the potential benefits of ecigarette­s as cessation aids versus the very real harms of ‘sole e-cigarette’ use among young non-smokers picking up e-cigarettes as the first tobacco product.”

This study “will be very important to a wide array of researcher­s,” Blaha, who was not involved in the research, said by email.

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