| Literature DB >> 30181382 |
Erikas Simonavicius1, Ann McNeill1,2, Lion Shahab3, Leonie S Brose1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review peer-reviewed evidence on heat-not-burn tobacco products (HnB), their secondhand emissions and use by humans; to identify differences between independent and industry-funded studies. DATA SOURCES: Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, ProQuest, Scopus and Web of Science databases were searched up to 6 November 2017 for studies on HnB published after December 2009; reference lists were screened and other researchers contacted, yielding 637 records. STUDY SELECTION: Thirty-one publications on HnB secondhand emissions (n=16) or use by humans (n=15) were selected by two reviewers with excellent agreement (k=0.75). DATA EXTRACTION: Data on authors' affiliations, HnB products, secondhand emissions and human exposure were extracted by one reviewer. Two reviewers assessed the quality of experimental HnB studies using the Effective Public Health Practice Project tool. DATA SYNTHESIS: Twenty out of 31 studies were affiliated with tobacco industry. Studies on secondhand emissions varied by methodology, products and comparators. Compared with cigarettes, HnB delivered up to 83% of nicotine and reduced levels of harmful and potentially harmful toxicants by at least 62% and particulate matter by at least 75%. Experimental HnB use studies were limited to one product, reductions of human exposure to toxicants varied between 42% and 96%. HnB use suppressed urges to smoke, but participants rated HnB less satisfying than cigarettes. While limited by methodological heterogeneity, findings were largely similar for independent and industry-funded studies.Entities:
Keywords: electronic nicotine delivery devices; harm reduction; secondhand smoke; tobacco industry; toxicology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30181382 PMCID: PMC6824610 DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2018-054419
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Control ISSN: 0964-4563 Impact factor: 7.552
Studies included in the review
| Authors, year of publication | Funder, country | Study design | Heat-not-burn and reference products | Main aim | |
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| 1 | Auer | Independent, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | IQOS | To compare levels of HPHC in mainstream IQOS emissions with those in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 2 | Farsalinos | Independent, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | IQOS | To compare levels of nicotine in mainstream IQOS emissions from regular and menthol tobacco sticks with nicotine in different type of e-cigarettes aerosol and in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 3 | Bekki | Independent, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | IQOS | To compare levels of nicotine and HPHC in mainstream IQOS emissions from regular and menthol tobacco sticks with those in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 4 | Schaller | PMI, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of HPHC in mainstream IQOS emissions with those in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 5 | Schaller | PMI, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of HPHC in mainstream IQOS emissions from regular and menthol tobacco sticks with those in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 6 | Jaccard | PMI, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of HPHC in mainstream IQOS emissions with those in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 7 | Pratte | PMI, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare numbers of solid particles in mainstream IQOS emissions with those in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 8 | Eaton | BAT, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | THP 1.0/glo | To compare levels of HPHC in mainstream glo emissions with those in mainstream cigarette smoke. |
| 9 | Forster | BAT, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | THP 1.0/glo | To compare levels of HPHC in mainstream glo emissions with those in mainstream IQOS emissions and cigarette smoke. |
| 10 | Poynton | BAT, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | iFuse | To compare levels of HPHC in mainstream iFuse emissions with those in mainstream Vype ePen emissions and cigarette smoke. |
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| 11 | Protano | Independent, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking volunteers | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of secondhand emissions. |
| 12 | Protano | Independent, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking volunteers | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of secondhand emissions. |
| 13 | Ruprecht | Independent, not reported | Laboratory comparison study using smoking volunteers | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of secondhand emissions. |
| 14 | Mitova | PMI, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking volunteers | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of secondhand emissions. |
| 15 | O’Connell | IT, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking volunteers. | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare levels of sidestream emissions. |
| 16 | Forster | BAT, | Laboratory comparison study using smoking machines | THP 1.0/glo | To compare levels of secondhand emissions. |
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| 17 | Kamada | Independent, | Case report | IQOS | To report a case of acute eosinophilic pneumonia following use. |
| 18 | Lopez | Independent, | Randomised crossover experimental trial | Pax LLTV | To compare nicotine delivery, expired air CO concentration and abstinence symptom suppression. |
| 19 | Brossard | PMI, | Randomised crossover experimental trial | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare nicotine delivery and effects on urge to smoke. |
| 20 | Haziza | PMI, | RCT | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare exposure to HPHC during 5 days of use. |
| 21 | Haziza | PMI, | RCT | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare exposure to HPHC during 5 days of use. |
| 22 | Lüdicke | PMI, | RCT | THS 2.1 | To compare exposure to HPHC during 5 days of use. |
| 23 | Lüdicke | PMI, | RCT | CHTP | To compare exposure to HPHC during 5 days of use. |
| 24 | Lüdicke | PMI, | RCT | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare exposure to HPHC during 5 days of use in confinement and further 85 days of use in an ambulatory setting. |
| 25 | Lüdicke | PMI, | RCT | THS 2.2/IQOS | To compare effect on biologically and clinically relevant risk markers during 90 days of use. |
| 26 | Picavet | PMI, | Randomised crossover experimental trial | THS 2.1 | To compare nicotine delivery and effects on urge to smoke. |
| 27 | Gee | BAT, Japan | Randomised crossover experimental trial | THP 1.0/glo | To compare the puffing topography, mouth level exposure and average daily consumption. |
| 28 | Yuki | JT, Japan | Randomised crossover experimental trial | PNTV/Ploom Tech | To compare the pharmacokinetics of nicotine delivery. |
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| 29 | Tabuchi | Independent, | Epidemiological study | IQOS | To report awareness and use of HnB products in a nationally representative sample. |
| 30 | Tabuchi | Independent, | Epidemiological study | IQOS | To assess population interest, rate of use, predictors of use and perceived effects of secondhand HnB aerosol. |
| 31 | Brose | Independent, | Epidemiological study | IQOS | To assess awareness and use of HnB products in a nationally representative sample. |
BAT, British American Tobacco; CHTP, carbon-heated tobacco product; HPHC, harmful and potentially harmful compounds; IT, Imperial Tobacco; JTI, Japan Tobacco International; LLTV, loose-leave tobacco vaporiser; PMI, Philip Morris International; PNTV, Prototype novel tobacco vapour product; RCT, randomised controlled trial; THP, tobacco heating product; THS, tobacco heating system.
Figure 1Systematic review PRISMA flow diagram.
HnB products assessed in the included studies
| HnB product and manufacturer | Release date, place | Description | Studies |
| Pax by Ploom | 2012, USA | Loose-leaf tobacco and cannabis vaporiser. Loose tobacco is placed into a chamber and heated by an electrically powered element. |
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| IQOS/THS 2.2 by PMI | 2014, Japan, Italy and Switzerland | IQOS includes a holder, a charger and tobacco sticks (Heets). A tobacco stick (about 320 mg) is inserted into the holder and the tobacco is heated with an electronically controlled heating blade which is inserted into tobacco plug. |
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| iFuse by BAT | 2015, Romania | iFuse includes an electronic vapour device with a rechargeable Li-ion battery and an integrated circuit power controller, onto which a cartomiser (Neopod) is attached. The disposable neopod comprises an atomiser, a liquid tank with 1.15 mL of non-flavoured nicotine liquid and a chamber containing a 130 mg tobacco plug. |
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| Glo/THP 1.0 by BAT | 2016, Japan | Glo includes an electronic device with a rechargeable Li-ion battery and a heating chamber and tobacco sticks. A tobacco stick (about 260 mg) is heated in the heating chamber from the periphery. |
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| Ploom Tech/PNTV by JTI | 2016, Japan | PNTV includes a power supply unit, a cartridge with a heater and liquid and a capsule with tobacco blend. |
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| Carbon-heated tobacco product (CHTP) by PMI | Not released | A specifically designed electric lighter lights the carbon heating source which then heats a tobacco plug. |
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| IQOS/THS 2.1 by PMI | Not released | THS 2.1 includes a holder, a charger and tobacco sticks. A tobacco stick is inserted into the holder and the tobacco is heated with an electronically controlled heating blade. |
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BAT, British American Tobacco; HnB, heat-not-burn tobacco product; ISO, International Organisation for Standardisation; PMI, Philip Morris International; PNTV, Prototype novel tobacco vapour product; JTI, Japan Tobacco International; LLTV, loose-leave tobacco vaporiser; PMI, Philip Morris International; THP, tobacco heating product; THS , tobacco heating system.
Relative nicotine delivery in mainstream HnB or e-cigarette aerosol in comparison to nicotine delivered to mainstream cigarette smoke
| Auer | Farsalinos | Bekki | Schaller | Schaller | Jaccard | Forster | Poynton | |
| Affiliation | University of Bern, Switzerland | University of Patras, Greece | National Institute of Public Health, Japan | PMI | PMI | PMI | BAT | BAT |
| Reference cigarette used | Lucky Strike Blue Lights | Marlboro Regular | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F |
| Product | Nicotine levels, % (mg) | |||||||
| Reference cigarette (set as 100%) | 0.361 | 1.99 | 1.70 | 1.89 | 1.88 | 1.86 | 2.02 | 1.84 |
| IQOS | 83% | 71% | 65% | 70% | 73% | 61% | 57% | – |
| Glo | – | – | – | – | – | – | 23% | – |
| iFuse | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 19% |
| Cigalike e-cigarette | – | 43% | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Second-generation pen-style e-cigarette | – | 87% | – | – | – | – | – | 27% |
| Third-generation tank-style e-cigarette | – | 92% | – | – | – | – | – | – |
*Provided nicotine values under ISO machine puffing regimen.
† Nicotine levels for HnB and e-cigarettes provided under 4 s puffing regimen.
‡ Nicotine levels were provided for 100 puff blocks under 3 s puffing regimen; nicotine level for 14 puffs was calculated by multiplying the nicotine level for 100 puffs by 0.14.
–, Not measured; BAT, British American Tobacco; PMI, Philip Morris International.
Relative levels of HPHC in mainstream HnB aerosol compared with reference cigarette
| Schaller | Schaller | Jaccard | Auer | Bekki | Eaton | Forster | Poynton | |||||
| Affiliation | PMI | PMI | PMI | University of Bern, Switzerland | National Institute of Public Health, Japan | BAT | BAT | BAT | ||||
| Tobacco stick | R. IQOS | R. IQOS | M. IQOS | R. IQOS | R. IQOS | R. IQOS | M. IQOS | R. glo | R. IQOS | R. glo | M. glo | R. iFuse |
| Reference cigarette | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | Lucky Strike Blue | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F | 3R4F |
| Puffing regimen | HCI | HCI | HCI | HCI | ISO | HCI | HCI | HCI | HCI | HCI | HCI | HCI* |
| 1,3-Butadiene | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | – | – | – | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% |
| 1-Aminonaphthalene | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | – | – | – | – | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% |
| 2-Aminonaphthalene | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | – | – | – | – | <1% | <1% | <1% | 3% |
| 4-Aminobiphenyl | <1% | <2% | <2% | <1% | – | – | – | – | <1% | <1% | <1% | 3% |
| Acetaldehyde | 12% | 14% | 13% | 13% | 22% | – | – | 5% | 15% | 5% | 5% | <1% |
| Acrolein | 7% | 7% | 6% | 6% | 82% | – | – | 1% | 6% | 1% | 2% | 5% |
| Acrylonitrile | 1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | – | – | – | – | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% |
| Ammonia | 38% | 36% | 35% | 36% | – | – | – | – | 33% | 12% | 15% | <50% |
| Benzene | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | – | – | – | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% |
| Benzo[a]pyrene | 7% | 9% | 8% | 6% | 4%†/8%‡ | – | – | <3% | 5% | 2% | 3% | <7% |
| Carbon monoxide | 1% | 2% | 2% | 1% | – | 1% | 1% | <1% | 1% | <1% | <1% | 21% |
| Crotonaldehyde | <6% | 6% | 5% | <6% | 4% | – | – | 5% | 1% | 2% | <3% | |
| Formaldehyde | 11% | 10% | 8% | 9% | 74% | – | – | 6% | 11% | 6% | 7% | 13% |
| Isoprene | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% | – | – | – | – | <1% | <1% | <1% | <1% |
| NNN | 5% | 6% | 4% | 4% | – | 6% | 8% | 9% | 4% | 9% | 7% | <1% |
| NNK | 3% | 3% | 2% | 3% | – | 5% | 5% | 2% | 4% | 2% | 2% | <1% |
| Toluene | 2% | 1% | 1% | 1% | – | – | – | – | 1% | <1% | <1% | 2% |
| Nicotine | 73% | 70% | 64% | 61% | 84% | 65% | 71% | – | 57% | 23% | 18% | 139% |
| Water | 203% | 231% | 188% | – | – | 328% | 350% | – | 168% | 80% | 71% | – |
| Glycerol | 203% | 191% | 163% | – | – | – | – | – | 182% | 129% | 101% | – |
| Total particulate matter | 122% | 98% | 89% | – | – | 119% | 135% | – | 104% | 56% | 54% | – |
| Tar/nicotine-free dry particulate matter | 79% | 33% | 40% | – | – | 39% | 53% | – | 75% | 46% | 48% | – |
*Puffing duration increased to 3 s, levels of HPHC for HnB product measured for 100 puffs.
†Originally reported proportions of HnB relative to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in mainstream smoke of 50 commercial US cigarettes.
‡Proportions recalculated using mean values of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in mainstream smoke of 50 commercial US cigarettes measured by ISO smoking regimen.15
BAT, British American Tobacco; HnB, heat-not-burn tobacco product; HPHC, harmful and potentially harmful compounds; ISO, International Organisation for Standardisation; M, menthol; NNK, nicotine-derived nitrosamine ketone; NNN, N-nitrosonornicotine; PMI, Philip Morris International; R, regular; –, not measured.
Relative levels of HPHC and particulate matter in secondhand emissions from HnB products (ratio HnB:reference cigarette)
| Ruprecht | Mitova | Forster | |
| Affiliation | National Cancer Institute, Milan, Italy | PMI | BAT |
| HnB | IQOS | IQOS | Glo |
| Reference cigarette | Conventional cigarette | Marlboro Gold | Lucky Strike Regular |
| Setting | ‘A sitting room’ (ACH=1.5) | ‘Residential’ | ‘Home’ |
| Secondhand emissions’ markers | |||
| 370 nm UV BC (µg/m3) | 0.7%–0.8% | – | – |
| PM>0.3 (particles/cm3) | 2.8%–7.3% | – | – |
| PMnm (particles/cm3) | 22.0%–24.0% | – | – |
| PM 1 (µg/m3) | 0.9%–1.0% | – | HnB < background |
| PM 2.5 (µg/m3) | 1.3%–1.5% | Non-detectable | HnB < background |
| PM 10 (µg/m3) | 1.5%–1.7% | – | HnB < background |
| Ultraviolet particulate matter | – | Non-detectable | – |
| Fluorescent particulate matter | – | Non-detectable | – |
| Solanesol | – | Non-detectable | – |
| 3-Ethenylpyridine | – | Non-detectable | Non-detectable |
| HPHC | |||
| 1,3-Butadiene | – | Non-detectable | Non-detectable |
| Acetaldehyde (µg/m3) | 5.0%–5.9% | 6.0% | 2.2% |
| Acrolein (µg/m3) | 1.8%–2.3% | Non-detectable | Non-detectable |
| Acrylonitrile | – | Non-detectable | Non-detectable |
| Benzene | – | 1.7% | HnB = background |
| Carbon monoxide | – | 3.8% | Non-detectable |
| Crotonaldehyde | – | Non-detectable | Non-detectable |
| Formaldehyde (µg/m3) | 6.9%–7.1% | 7.6% | 10.2% |
| Isoprene | – | HnB < background | HnB < background |
| Toluene | – | HnB < background | 3.7% |
| Nicotine | – | 6.2% | HnB < background |
| Nitrogen oxides | – | HnB < background | HnB < background |
| Nitrogen oxide | – | HnB < background | HnB < background |
ACH, air changes per hour (ventilation rate of an indoor space defined as air volume added/removed from the space in 1 hour divided by the space volume); BAT, British American Tobacco; HnB, heat-not-burn tobacco product; HPHC, harmful and potentially harmful compounds; –, not measured; PM > 0.3, particulate matter larger than 0.3 µm; PM nm, particulate matter in size range of 10–1000 nm; PMI, Philip Morris International; UV BC, ultraviolet black carbon.
Product use and ratio of levels of exposure to HPHC in HnB users compared with cigarette smokers on the fifth day of confinement
| Lüdicke | Lüdicke | Haziza | Haziza | Lüdicke | |
| Affiliation | PMI | PMI | PMI | PMI | PMI |
| HnB product | CHTP | THS 2.1 | Regular IQOS | Regular IQOS | Menthol IQOS |
| Reference product | Regular cigarette | Regular cigarette | Regular cigarette | Regular cigarette | Menthol cigarette |
| Mean (SD) | 19.7 (7.8) vs 18.8 (4.4) | 27.2 (9.1) vs 20.1 (3.2) | 9.9 (3.9) vs 12.5 (3.5) | 20.7 (8.1) vs 16.6 (3.8) | 13.9 (4.3) vs 13.6 (4.7) |
| Exposure to HPHC | |||||
| 1,3-Butadiene | 10% | 12% (9% to 16%) | 23% (18% to 29%) | 8% (7% to 10%) | 13% |
| 1-Aminonaphthalene | – | – | 4% (4% to 5%) | 4% (3% to 5%) | 6% |
| 2-Aminonaphthalene | 19% | 11% (8% to 14%) | 18% (15% to 21%) | 12% (10% to 13%) | 14% |
| 4-Aminobiphenyl | 16% | 41% (31% to *53%) | 18% (15% to 22%) | 15% (13% to 17%) | 21% |
| Acetaldehyde* | – | – | – | – | – |
| Acrolein | 26% | 28% (23% to 33%) | 53% (46% to 61%) | 42% (38% to 46%) | 52% |
| Acrylonitrile | – | 15% (12% to 18%) | 21% (18% to 25%) | 13% (12% to 15%) | 18% |
| Ammonia* | – | – | – | – | – |
| Benzene | 16% | 7% (5% to 10%) | 16% (13% to 19%) | 6% (5% to 7%) | 11% |
| Benzo[a]pyrene | – | – | 30% (25% to 36%) | 28% (23% to 33%) | 28% |
| Carbon monoxide | 39% | 23% (21% to 26%) | 47% (44% to 50%) | 24% (22% to 25%) | 45% |
| Crotonaldehyde | – | – | 38% (32% to 45%) | 23% (20% to 25%) | 43% |
| Formaldehyde* | – | – | – | – | – |
| Isoprene* | – | – | – | – | – |
| N-nitrosonornicotine | 12% (9% to 16%) | 30% (24% to 38%) | 24% (18% to 33%) | 29% | |
| Nicotine-derived nitrosamine ketone | 52% | 33% (25% to 44%) | 49% (42% to 57%) | 44% (39% to 48%) | 44% |
| Toluene* | – | – | – | – | – |
| Nicotine | – | 85% (62% to 115%) | 113% (91% to 140%)‡/89.6%§ | 113% (91% to 140%) | – |
| Nicotine equivalents | 111% | 87% (76% to 100%) | 105% (92% to 120%)‡/98.6%§ | 105% (92% to 120%) | 118% |
| Cotinine | 110% | 88% (75% to 103%) | 96% (71% to 131%) | 111% (91% to 136%) | – |
| Ethylene oxide | – | – | 47% (40% to 55%) | 32% (27% to 38%) | 51% |
| Pyrene | 57% | 43% (36% to 51%) | 46% (41% to 52%) | 44% (40% to 49%) | 38% |
| o-Toluidine | 49% | 58% (48% to 71%) | 51% (42% to 60%) | 42% (36% to 48%) | 41% |
*Exposure to acetaldehyde, ammonia, formaldehyde, isoprene and toluene was not measured due to absence of valid biomarkers.
†Originally reported proportions.
‡Proportions calculated based on raw study figures.
HnB, heat-not-burn tobacco product; HPHC, harmful and potentially harmful compounds; –, not measured; PMI , Philip Morris International.