| Literature DB >> 34205612 |
Małgorzata Znyk1, Joanna Jurewicz1, Dorota Kaleta1.
Abstract
Heated tobacco products (HTP) are a form of nicotine delivery intended to be an alternative to traditional cigarettes. HTP tobacco products are sold to consumers as a less harmful alternative to traditional cigarettes, both for users and bystanders. The actual impact of HTP on the health of users and its overall impact on public health is still not fully known. A systematic search of the literature was carried out to identify relevant studies published in English from 2015 to February 2021. The following databases were used: PubMed, Scopus, Elsevier and ClinicalKey. 25 studies (independent and sponsored by the tobacco industry) were considered. The analysis of exposure biomarkers and cardiovascular and respiratory biomarkers showed differences between smokers and people using heated tobacco products. Improvements in clinically relevant risk markers, especially cholesterol, sICAM-1, 8-epi-PGF2α, 11-DTX-B2, HDL and FEV1, were observed compared to persistent cigarette smokers. On the other hand, exposure to IQOS has been reported to alter mitochondrial function, which may further exaggerate airway inflammation, airway remodeling and lung cancer. These products have the potential to increase oxidative stress and increase respiratory tract infections by increasing microbial adherence to the respiratory tract. Our review suggests that HTP products may be products with a reduced risk of chronic diseases, including respiratory and cardiovascular diseases and cancer compared to traditional smoking, although in the case of non-smokers so far, they may pose a risk of their occurrence. Research seems to be necessary to assess the frequency of HTP use and its potential negative health effects.Entities:
Keywords: Glo; IQOS; Ploom; adverse health effects; heat-non-burn; heated tobacco products
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34205612 PMCID: PMC8296358 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18126651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Studies included in the review.
| Authors, Year of Publication | Material | Country | Funder | Main Objective |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Van der Toorn, 2018 | in vitro | Switzerland | dependent | functional and molecular changes in human bronchial epithelial BEAS-2B cells following a 12-week exposure to total particulate matter (TPM) from the aerosol of a candidate modified-risk tobacco product (cMRTP) in comparison with those following exposure to TPM from the 3R4F reference cigarette. |
| Sohal, 2019 | in vitro | Australia | independent | exposure to IQOS has the same damaging effect on human airway epithelial and smooth muscle cells as traditional tobacco cigarette and eCigs in vitro. |
| Miyashita, 2018 | human | UK | independent | e-cigarette vapour increases pneumococcal adhesion to airway cells. |
| Malinska, 2018 | in vitro | Poland | dependent | assessment of mitochondrial function following short- and long-term exposure of human bronchial epithelial cells to total particulate matter from a candidate modified-risk tobacco product and reference cigarettes. |
| Leigh, 2018 | in vitro | US | independent | the potential toxic effects of inhaling emissions from an HTP in comparison with electronic and combustible tobacco cigarettes. |
| Walczak, 2020 | in vitro | Poland | dependent | morphology and dynamics of the mitochondrial network in human bronchial epithelial cells exposed to total particulate matter (TPM) generated from 3R4F reference cigarette smoke and from aerosol from a new candidate modified risk tobacco product, the Tobacco Heating System (THS 2.2). |
| Adriaens, 2018 | human | Belgium | independent | to investigate the effect of using an IQOS™ on eCO, acute cigarette craving, withdrawal symptoms and subjective positive and negative experiences after overnight smoking abstinence, compared to using an e-cigarette or a regular tobacco cigarette; and to investigate which product (e-cigarette or IQOS™) would be preferred. |
| Kamada, 2016 | human | Japan | independent | report the first case of AEP caused by smoking HC |
| Aokage, 2019 | human | Japan | independent | report a successfully treated case of fatal AEP, presumably induced by HNBC use. |
| Tabuchi, 2018 | human | Japan | independent | to assess interest in HnB tobacco products (including IQOS, Ploom and Glo), its prevalence in 2015, 2016 and 2017, to examine the symptoms from exposure to secondhand HNB tobacco aerosol in Japan. |
| Lee, 2019 | human | Korea | independent | assessment of association of the HnB’s use with perceived stress, physical activity and internet use. |
| Lopez, 2016 | human | US | independent | to expand existing clinical laboratory methods to examine, in cigarette smokers, the acute effects of a “heat, not burn” “loose-leaf tobacco vaporizer” (LLTV). |
| Poussin, 2016 | in vitro | Switzerland | dependent | to compare the biological impact of aqueous extracts from a candidate MRTP, Tobacco Heating System (THS) 2.2 (electrically-heated tobacco technology), and the 3R4F reference cigarette on monocytic cell-HCAEC adhesion combining functional measurements from an in vitro adhesion assay with transcriptomics and inflammatory protein marker data to investigate changes at the molecular level. |
| Van der Toorn, 2015 | in vitro | Switzerland | dependent | the effect from a new candidate modified risk tobacco product, the tobacco heating system (THS) 2.2, on the migratory behavior of monocytes in comparison with combustible 3R4F reference cigarettes. |
| Lüdicke, 2018 | human | Japan | dependent | risk markers of smoking-related diseases. |
| Haziza, 2020a | human | US | dependent | the exposure reduction to selected HPHCs in smokers switching to menthol Tobacco Heating System (mTHS) 2.2 compared with smokers continuing smoking menthol cigarettes (mCCs) and smoking abstinence (SA). |
| Haziza, 2020b | human | US | dependent | offering an alternative to cigarettes for smokers while substantially reducing the exposure to harmful and potentially harmful constituents found in cigarette smoke. |
| Haziza, 2016a | human | Japan | dependent | demonstrate exposure reduction to a selected set of HPHCs when switching from CCs to THS 2.2, as compared to continued CC use and smoking abstinence (SA) for five days. |
| Lüdicke, 2016 | human | Poland | dependent | to investigate the effects of exposure to selected harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHCs) of cigarette smoke in adult smokers who switched to a carbon-heated tobacco product (CHTP), compared with adult smokers who continued to smoke CCs and those who abstained from smoking for five days. |
| Lüdicke, 2017 | human | Switzerland | dependent | examined whether the levels of selected biomarkers of exposure were reduced in smokers who switched from CCs to THS 2.1, as compared to smokers that continued to smoke CCs. |
| Lüdicke, 2018 | human | Japan | dependent | examined the impact of switching to mTHS on biomarkers of exposure to HPHCs relative to menthol CCs (mCCs) and smoking abstinence (SA). |
| Ogden, 2015 | human | US | dependent | evaluation of biomarkers of biological effect (e.g., inflammation, lipids, hypercoaguable state). |
| Biondi-Zoccai, 2019 | human | Italy | independent | to appraise the acute effects of single use of HNBC, EVC and TC in healthy smokers. |
| Gale, 2021 | human | UK | dependent | investigating whether biomarkers of exposure (BoE) to smoke toxicants are reduced when smokers switch from smoking cigarettes to using the glo THP. |
| Haziza, 2016b | human | Poland | dependent | to demonstrate a reduction in exposure to HPHCs. |
The adverse health effects of expsoure to IQOS/HTP.
| Type of Outcome | Human Studies | In Vitro Studies |
|---|---|---|
| destructive effect on human respiratory epithelial cells/human bronchial epithelial cells | + ↓ (Haziza, 2020) | + ↓ (Van der Toorn, 2018) |
| destructive effect on monocytic cell line and human coronary arterial endothelial cells | - | + ↓ (Van der Toorn, 2018) |
| destructive effect on nasal epithelial cells | - | + ↑ (Miyashita, 2018) |
| lung cancer risk | + ↓ (Haziza, 2016a, 2016b) | + ↓ (Van der Toorn, 2018) |
| AEP acute eosinophilic pneumonia | + ↑ (Kamada, 2016) | - |
| asthma, allergy, rhinitis | + ↑ (Lee, 2019) | + ↑ (Miyashita, 2018) |
| atopic dermatitis | + ↑ (Lee, 2019) | - |
| oxidative stress/oxidative damage | + ↑ (Ogden, 2015) | + ↑ (Sohal, 2019) |
| inflammation, infections in the respiratory tract | - | + ↑ (Sohal, 2019) |
| mitochondrial dysfunction/mitochondrial stress | - | + ↑ (Malinska, 2018) |
| the risk of cardiovascular disease | + ↓ (Lopez, 2016) | + ↓ (Poussin, 2016) |
| atherosclerosis | + ↑ (Biondi Zoccai, 2019) | - |
| adhesion of monocytic cells to coronary endothelial cells | - | + ↓ (Poussin, 2016) |
| 11-dehydro-thromboxane B2 (a biomarker of platelet activation) | + ↓ (Haziza, 2020) | - |
| adhesion molecule-1 (biomarker of endothelial function | + ↓ (Lüdicke, 2018) | - |
| 8-epi-prostaglandin F2α (a biomarker of oxidative stress) | + ↓ (Lüdicke, 2018) | - |
| high-density lipoprotein cholesterol | + ↑ (Lüdicke, 2018) | - |
| low-density lipoprotein cholesterol | + ↑ (Haziza, 2020) | - |
| total cholesterol | + ↓ (Haziza, 2020) | - |
| C -reactive protein | + ↓ (Haziza, 2020) | - |
| Intracellural adhesion molecule 1 | + ↓ (Haziza, 2020) | - |
| Blood morphology: | + ↓(Ogden, 2015) | - |
| exposure biomarkers | + ↓ (Haziza, 2016) | - |
| reducing cigarette cravings and withdrawal symptoms | + ↓ (Adriaens, 2018) | - |
+ effect (↓ decrease of the effect, ↑ increase of the effect). - no effect.