| Literature DB >> 29323232 |
Thomas W Fuller1, Abhinav P Acharya2, Thiagarajan Meyyappan2, Michelle Yu1, Godugu Bhaskar3, Steven R Little2,4,5,6,7,8, Tatum V Tarin9,10,11.
Abstract
Electronic cigarette (EC) use is gaining popularity as a substitute for conventional smoking due to the perception and evidence it represents a safer alternative. In contrast to the common perception amongst users that ECs represent no risk initial studies have revealed a complex composition of e-cigarette liquids. Conventional cigarette smoking is a known risk factor for developing bladder cancer and prior reports raise concern some of those causative compounds may exist in EC liquids or vapor. Urine samples were collected from 13 e-cigarette using subjects and 10 non e-cigarette using controls. Five known bladder carcinogens that are either present in conventional cigarettes, products of combustion, or solvents believed to be used in some e-cigarette formulations were quantified by liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry (LC-MS). Analysis of e-cigarette user urine revealed the presence of two carcinogenic compounds, o-toluidine and 2-naphthylamine, at a mean 2.3 and 1.3 fold higher concentration (p-value of 0.0013 and 0.014 respectively). Many of these subjects (9/13) were long term nonsmokers (>12 months). Further study is needed to clarify the safety profile of e-cigarettes and their contribution to the development of bladder cancer given the greater concentration of carcinogenic aromatic amines in the urine of e-cigarette users.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29323232 PMCID: PMC5765148 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-19030-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Control and subject demographics, historical conventional cigarette use description, and current e-cigarette use behaviors.
| E-cigarette Control & Subject Demographics | |
|---|---|
|
|
|
| Age | 30.1 +/− 7.7 |
| Gender (% male) | 50.0% |
|
|
|
| Age | 39.4 + /− 13.5 |
| Gender (% male) | 69.2% |
| Duration of conventional cigarette Use (yrs) | 19.9 +/− 11.9 |
| Packs per day when smoking | 1.3 +/− 0.4 |
| Time since last conventional cigarette use (mo) | 19.9 +/− 14.9 |
| Duration of e-cigarette use (mo) | 26 +/− 11.3 |
| Frequency of e-cigarette use - % > 28 per week | 84.6% |
| E-cigarette nicotine concentration (mg/ml) | 6.8 |
Mean concentration, standard deviation, and range of o-toluidine and 2-naphthylamine in e-cigarettes users and control urine (ng/ml). *N = 9 for o-toluidine controls as one participants o-toluidine level was undetectable.
| Urinary Excretion of 2-naphthylamine and o-toluidine | ||
|---|---|---|
| EC users | non-EC using controls | |
|
| ||
| N | 13 | 9* |
| Mean concentration (ng/ml) +/− SD | 2.33 +/− 0.92 | 1.00 +/− 0.45 |
| Range (ng/ml) | 0.94–4.23 | 0.42–1.67 |
|
| ||
| N | 13 | 10 |
| Mean concentration (ng/ml) +/− SD | 1.46 +/− 0.23 | 1.13 +/− 0.36 |
| Range (ng/ml) | 1.05–1.76 | 0.40–1.69 |
Figure 1Box plots showing increased levels of (A) o-toluidine and (B) 2-naphthylamine in the urine samples of e-cigarette users as compared non e-cigarette using controls.
Figure 2Scatter plot of time since traditional cigarette cessation and concentration of 2-naphthylamine and o-toluidine. There is poor correlation between time since cessation and concentration implying the presence of the carcinogens is not from metabolism of remnant 2-naphthylamine or o-toluidine.