| Literature DB >> 35811880 |
Clement N Uguna1, Colin E Snape1.
Abstract
The chemical evidence that IQOS emissions fit the definition of both an aerosol and smoke, and that IQOS and potentially other heated tobacco products (HTPs) pose some harmful health threats from the range of compounds released even at somewhat lower concentrations is reviewed. Further, we address the yields of harmful and potentially harmful compounds (HPHCs), including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and the constituents of IQOS emission that are diagnostic of pyrolysis to provide information on the temperatures reached in IQOS tobacco sticks. The HPHCs present in IQOS emissions are the same as in conventional cigarette smoke (CCs), analogous to emissions from earlier generation of HTPs classed as smoke. However, Philip Morris International (PMI) studies have to some degree underestimated IQOS aerosol HPHC yields, which are a factor of between 3.2 and 3.6 higher when expressed on a tobacco rather than an IQOS stick basis compared to the reference 3R4F cigarette. Further, IQOS emissions contain carbon particles, which fit definition of both aerosol and smoke. Continual reheating of deposited tar in the IQOS device will occur with real-life use, likely leading to generation of even higher concentrations of HPHCs and particulate matter. Despite IQOS not exceeding 350 °C, local hot spots could exist, causing formation of species (phenol/cresols, PAHs). It is recommended that the impact of repeated use to determine the levels of black carbon (insoluble organic matter) in the particulate matter, and the extent to which compounds in IQOS emissions are formed by pyrolysis need to be assessed rigorously. To address whether uneven temperature profiles in heat sticks can lead to potential hot spots that could, for example, lead to PAH formation, it is recommended that pyrolysis studies on tobacco and other constituents of HTPs are required in conjunction with more effort on heating tobacco blends under controlled temperature/time conditions.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35811880 PMCID: PMC9260752 DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c01527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Omega ISSN: 2470-1343
Some Definitions and Descriptions of Smoke and Aerosols with Respect to Conventional Cigarettes and HTPs
| definition/description | affiliation |
|---|---|
| an aerosol is suspension of particles
in air or gas; the particles
can be composed of only liquids or a mixture of liquids and solids[ | tobacco industry (accessed 1 March 2022) |
| cigarette smoke aerosol is a complex
and dynamic mixture of
gases, liquid droplets, and solid particles suspended in air; generated
by combustion, pyrolysis, and pyrosynthesis processes that overlap
with low temperature distillation and sublimation processes[ | tobacco industry (published 2020) |
| IQOS aerosol contains low levels of low molecular
weight gases
(such as CO, CO2 and NH3), aldehydes, ketones,
low molecular weight hydrocarbons, and aromatics formed from drying,
evaporation, and thermochemical decomposition (torrefaction/low temperature
pyrolysis) of tobacco[ | tobacco industry
(published 2020,[ |
| combustible cigarette
smoke consists of an aerosol containing
liquid droplets (particulate phase) suspended in a carrier gas and
surrounded by its own gas vapor phase[ | tobacco industry (published 2016) |
| an aerosol is a suspension of solid or liquid particles in
a gas, usually air[ | tobacco industry (accessed 17 November 2020) |
| smoke
is an aerosol that contains solid particles and thousands
of chemicals that are generated at high temperatures when a material
combusts[ | tobacco industry (accessed 17 November 2020) |
| smoke released
by IQOS was described to contain elements from
pyrolysis and thermogenic degradation that are the same harmful constituents
of conventional tobacco cigarette[ | independent study (published 2017) |
| it has been estimated that approximately 83% of combustible
cigarette smoke is in a gaseous form that is not visible[ | independent study (published 2013) |
| emissions from early generation heated tobacco product
(Eclipse)
were classed as smoke[ | tobacco industry (published 2004) |
Comparison of Constituent Released from an IQOS (THS 2.2) Stick Vapors with Those from the 3R4F Reference Cigarette Smokea
| Cozzani et
al.[ | PMI MRTP data[ | Schaller et al.[ | Auer et al.[ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| constituents detected | amount per heatstick (HCI regimen) | amount per heatstick (HCI regimen) | amount per heatstick (HCI regimen) | amount per heatstick (ISO regimen) | range of values obtained
per 3R4F cigarette[ |
| carbonyls | |||||
| acetaldehyde | 211–230 (13–14) | 197.2–199.4 (12–12) | 181–267 (11–16) | 133 | 1656–1713 |
| acetone | 31–35.9 (4–5) | 31.5–32.5 (5) | 28.7–41.9 (4–6) | 0.9 | 685–708 |
| butyraldehyde (μg) | 22.5–23.1 (25) | 15.3–25.6 (18–31) | 83.5–91 | ||
| acrolein | 8.4–10.7 (5–7) | 9.20–9.36 (5) | 5.83–14.17 (4–9) | 161–177 | |
| crotonaldehyde | 0.988–3.292 (2–6) | 3.29 (6) | 3.29 (6) | 0.7 | 51.7–55.2 |
| formaldehyde | 6.1–9.1 (7–10) | 7.10–7.68 (10–11) | 4.58–13.42 (5–15) | 3.2 | 70.2–88.9 |
| methyl ethyl ketone | 7.0–7.6 (4) | 7.08–7.10 (4) | 6.42–10.15 (4–6) | 183–197 | |
| propionaldehyde | 13.7–14.9 (11–12) | 12.2–12.4 (10) | 12.3–15.2 (10–12) | 7.8 | 122–125 |
| vinyl acetate | 60.1–66.4 (9–10) | 646 | |||
| glycols | |||||
| glycerin (mg) | 4.38–4.39 (190) | 3.72–5.69 (163–250) | 2.28–2.30 | ||
| hydrocarbons | |||||
| 1,3-butadiene | 0.3 (0.3) | 0.230–0.273 (0.2–0.3) | 0.095–0.347 (0.1–0.4) | 93–98.2 | |
| benzene | 0.5–0.6 (0.6–0.7) | 0.483–0.561 (0.6–0.7) | 0.442–1.010 (0.5–1.0) | 81.1–90.7 | |
| ethylbenzene | 0.132–0.151 (0.9–1.0) | 14.8 | |||
| hydroquinone (μg) | 7.0–7.4 (8) | 4.77–9.39 (5–11) | 88.3–92.5 | ||
| toluene | 1.9–2.0 (1) | 1.40–1.65 (1) | 1.77–3.05 (1–2) | 137–158 | |
| styrene | 0.7–0.8 (4) | 0.328–0.336 (3) | 0.468–1.128 (3–7) | 13–18.2 | |
| isoprene | 2.3–2.6 (0.3) | 1.33–1.62 (0.2) | 1.01–4.34 (0.1–0.5) | 812–913 | |
| metals | |||||
| arsenic | 1.20 (15) | 1.20–1.43 (15–18) | 7.99–8.23 | ||
| cadmium | 0.09–0.28 (0.1–0.3) | 0.280 (0.3) | 94–99.4 | ||
| lead | 1.62–3.80 (5–12) | 31.9 | |||
| mercury | 1.88–2.11 (43–48) | 0.70–1.60 (15–34) | 4.36–4.67 | ||
| nitrogen-containing compounds | |||||
| acetamide | 3.21–3.28 (26–27) | 2.24–6.28 (17–48) | 12.3–13.0 | ||
| acrylamide | 1.64–1.80 (38–42) | 0.78–3.56 (17–79) | 4.33–4.5 | ||
| acrylonitrile | 0.2 (0.8) | 0.107–0.112 (0.5) | 0.107–0.335 (0.4–1.0) | 22.5–26.1 | |
| ammonia | 13.14–13.38 (41–42) | 5.3–97.2 (17–312) | 31.2–31.7 | ||
| hydrogen cyanide | 2.06–2.17 (0.5) | 4.37–10.07 (1–3) | 364–433 | ||
| 3-aminobiphenyl (ng) | 0.012 (0.3) | 0.004–0.014 (0.1–0.3) | 4.09–4.5 | ||
| 4-aminobiphenyl | 0.016 (0.5) | 0.008–0.010 (0.3–0.4) | 0.005–0.028 (0.2–1.0) | 2.77–3.10 | |
| 1-aminonaphthalene | 0.07 (0.3) | 0.027 (0.1) | 0.027–0.091 (0.1–0.4) | 18.4–22.4 | |
| 2,6-dimethlyaniline | 0.270–0.316 (3–4) | 8.01 | |||
| 2-aminonaphthalene | 0.04 (0.3) | 0.012 (0.1) | 0.012–0.056 (0.1–0.3) | 11.6–16.2 | |
| nicotine | 1.37–1.38 (69) | 1.23 (66) | 0.62–1.64 (33–87) | 1.87–2.0 | |
| nitromethane | 44.3–51.2 (5–6) | 809 | |||
| 0.124–0.131 (2–3) | 5.20 | ||||
| 1.08 (1) | 0.542–3.094 (0.5–3.0) | 103.9–105 | |||
| quinoline | 0.003–0.011 (0.6–2) | 0.011 (3) | 0.011 (3) | 0.409–0.49 | |
| pyridine (μg) | 7.4–7.8 (21–22) | 5.53–11.18 (18–35) | 31.5–35.1 | ||
| 2-nitropropane | 6.0–8.40 (16–23) | 36.5 | |||
| other constituents | |||||
| Tar (NFDPM) (mg) | 16.5–17.9 (60–65) | 18.7–20 (65–70) | 10.6–25.5 (40–95) | 26.8–28.6 | |
| TPM (mg) | 54–55.2 (118–120) | 52.8–54.8 (118–122) | 46.8–57.8 (105–129) | 44.7–45.8 | |
| vinyl chloride | 0.657 (0.5) | 2.19–3.92 (2–4) | 100.8–128 | ||
| water (mg) | 34.7–37.3 (213–229) | 32.9–33.6 (230–235) | 25.6–40.9 (162–258) | 14.3–16.3 | |
| oxygenated compounds | |||||
| carbon monoxide | 0.159–0.54 (0.5–2) | 0.067(0.2) | 0.223–0.567(0.7–2) | 30.6–33.4 | |
| ethylene oxide | 0.198–0.234 (0.9–1) | 0.119–0.324 (0.5–1) | 21.2–24.10 | ||
| benzo[ | 0.027–0.030 (5) | 0.592 | |||
| furan | 4.43–4.49 (8) | 58.3 | |||
| nitric oxide (μg) | 3.7–51.4 (0.7–10) | 510 | |||
| nitrogen oxide (μg) | 4.2–51.4 (0.7–9) | 571 | |||
| propylene oxide | 158–159 (17) | 65–109 (6–10) | 930–1110 | ||
| PAHs | |||||
| naphthalene | 5.94–7.34 (0.5–0.6) | 1.6 | 1197 | ||
| 1-methylnaphthalene (ng) | 6.78–8.36 (0.7–0.8) | 1016 | |||
| 2-methylnaphthalene (ng) | 29.8–35.3 (3–4) | 953 | |||
| acenaphthylene (ng) | 2.44–2.97 (1–2) | 1.9 | 196 | ||
| acenaphthene (ng) | 0.683–0.702 (0.5) | 145 | 129 | ||
| anthracene (ng) | 0.786–0.942 (0.7–0.8) | 0.3 | 120 | ||
| fluorene (ng) | 8.1–10.3 (2–3) | 1.5 | 409 | ||
| phenanthrene (ng) | 5.34–6.62 (3) | 2.0 | 201 | ||
| benz[ | 2.01–2.75 (6–9) | 0.36–20.52 (1–75) | 1.8 | 27.2–31.6 | |
| chrysene | 2.93–3.86 (7–9) | 1.5 | 40.7 | ||
| fluoranthene (ng) | 7.6–10.5 (7–10) | 7.3 | 107 | ||
| pyrene (ng) | 8.4–11.4 (9–13) | 1.97–74.09 (2–93) | 6.4 | 79.3–88.9 | |
| benzo[ | 0.84–1.20 (6–9) | 0.5 | 13.9 | ||
| benzo[ | 0.395–0.607 (8–12) | 0.4 | 4.86 | ||
| benzo[ | 0.574–0.849 (8–12) | 7.30 | |||
| benzo[ | 0.86–1.29 (11–16) | 7.96 | |||
| benzo[ | 0.104 (9) | 1.15 | |||
| benzo[ | 0.60–0.61 (3–4) | 0.74–1.12 (5–7) | 0.35–4.46 (2–30) | 0.8 | 15.0–17.3 |
| perylene (ng) | 0.379 (10) | 3.78 | |||
| benzo[ | 0.496–0.680 (8–10) | 6.54 | |||
| benzo[ | 0.337 (12) | 2.85 | |||
| cyclopenta[c,d]pyrene | 1.12–1.96 (19–33) | 6.0 | |||
| dibenzo[ | 0.124 (16) | 0.413 (52) | 0.79–0.797 | ||
| indeno[1,2,3-cd]pyrene | 0.337 (6) | 5.36 | |||
| phenols | |||||
| catechol | 14.3–14.7 (17) | 12.7–12.9 (13) | 10.6–16.3 (12–18) | 84.2–98.1 | |
| 0.03 (1) | 0.030–0.033 (1) | 0.019–0.116 (1–3) | 3.2–3.61 | ||
| 0.06–0.07 (2) | 0.041–0.42 (1) | 0.041–0.113 (1–3) | 3.76–4.11 | ||
| 0.07 (0.9) | 0.034–0.040 (0.5–0.6) | 0.034–0.122 (0.4–1.0) | 6.56–8.86 | ||
| phenol | 1.3–1.4 (10–11) | 0.812–0.941 (6–7) | 0.72–1.59 (5–11) | 12.8–14.4 | |
| resorcinol (μg) | 0.016–0.055 (0.8–3) | 0.055–0.080 (3–5) | 1.75–2.0 | ||
| TSNAs | |||||
| 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone
(NNK) | 6.92–9.00 (3–4) | 2.0–29.3 (0.8–11) | 232–261 | ||
| 9.5–15.2 (3–5) | 3.0–57.1 (1–20) | 277–284 | |||
| 0.77–8.89 (3–29) | 30.3 | ||||
| 4.9–63.9 (2–24) | 269 | ||||
The results compare the yields from an IQOS stick with the reference 3R4F cigarette; however, on an equivalent tobacco basis, the IQOS yields should be multiplied by at least 3.2. HCI, Health Canada Intense smoking regimen; ISO, International Organization for Standardization smoking regimen; PAHs, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; TSNAs, tobacco-specific nitrosamines. Note: For consistency with other data in the table, only yields reported for THS 2.2 by Auer et al.[29] are presented here because the authors reported yields of reference cigarette that were different from 3R4F reported by the other studies.
Compound in IQOS aerosol as a percentage of amount in 3R4F reference cigarette smoke.
Compound in FDA list of HPHCs.
Calculation of the Mass of 3R4F Cigarette Tobacco Smoked to Generate Smoke in Two PMI Studies (Cozzani et al.[4] and Schaller et al.[8])
| tobacco content of the 3R4F reference cigarette reported | 753 mg[ |
| entire length of 3R4F cigarette together with its filter | 83.9 mm[ |
| 3R4F cigarette filter length | 26.7 mm[ |
| 3R4F cigarette rod length holding 753 mg of tobacco | 83.9 mm −26.7 mm = 57.2 mm |
| amount of tobacco contained in 1 mm of rod length assuming 57.2 mm rod length contain 753 mg of tobacco parked uniformly over its length | [(753 mg × 1 mm)/57.2 mm = 13.2 mg] |
| butt length
of 3R4F cigarette smoked to generate smoke (Cozzani
et al.[ | 35 mm |
| 3R4F tobacco length burnt to generate smoke by smoking
3R4F
cigarette to a butt length of 35 mm (Cozzani et al.[ | filter plus unburnt tobacco minus butt length of 35 mm after smoking (83.9 mm – 35 mm = 48.9 mm) |
| amount of 3R4F cigarette tobacco smoked
to generate smoke (Cozzani
et al.[ | tobacco contained in 1 mm length of 3R4F rod times length of the tobacco rod burnt divided by 1 mm rod length of 3R4F cigarette [(13.2 mg × 48.9 mm)/1 mm = 645.5 mg] |
Figure 1Internal view of the IQOS holder. (A–C) Clean, unused holder showing heater (blue arrows). (D–F) Used holder that was cleaned after every use; black residue remains on heater (red arrows). (G–I) Used holder that was not cleaned between uses (10 uses). Adapted from an independent study Davis et al.[45] and reproduced with the permission of BMJ Publishing Group, Ltd.
Figure 2Comparison of IQOS (THS 2.2) aerosol total particulate matter (TPM), tar (NFDPM), and water yields to 3R4F reference cigarette smoke yields generated under HCI regimen. TPM does not include compounds in the gas vapor phase (GVP). However, on an equivalent tobacco basis, the IQOS TPM and NFDPM yields should be multiplied by at least 3.2. Note: 3R4F used for each study is the same sample; any difference in yield reflects experimental error from different experiments. PMI MRTP data[37] are average yields of regular and menthol heatsticks, while Schaller et al.[38] is for FR1 blend.
Yields of Constituents Not in the FDA List of HPHCs that Are Higher in IQOS Aerosol than in 3R4F Smoke under the HCI Regimena
| St. Helen et al.[ | Bentley et al.[ | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| constituents detected | amount per THS 2.2 heatstick | amount per THS 2.2 heatstick | range of values obtained per 3R4F cigarette[ |
| acids | |||
| benzoic acid, 2,5-dihydroxy-methyl (μg) | 4.55 (209) | 2.18 | |
| 3-methylvaleric acid (μg) | 5.1 (140) | 3.63 | |
| 3-methylpentanoic acid (μg) | 14.5 (113) | 12.8 | |
| carbonyls | |||
| ethyl linoleate (μg) | 0.135 (1688) | 0.008 | |
| ethyl linolenate (μg) | 0.614 (401) | 0.153 | |
| 2-furancarboxaldehyde,5-methyl (μg) | 11.1 (378) | 2.94 | |
| ethyl dodecanoate (ethyl laurate) (μg) | 0.023 | not detected | |
| hexadecanoic acid, ethyl ester (μg) | 0.491 (6138) | 6.43 (6430) | 0.008–0.1 |
| phenylacetaldehyde (μg) | 1.41 (267) | 0.529 | |
| stearate, ethyl (μg) | 0.074 (2467) | 0.003 | |
| glycols | |||
| propylene glycol (μg) | 175 (738) | 643 (717) | 23.7–89.6 |
| hydrocarbons | |||
| heptacosane (μg) | 10.2 (121) | 8.41 | |
| benzene, 1,2,3,4-tetramethyl-4-(1-methylethenyl) (μg) | 0.006 (120) | 0.005 | |
| butylated hydroxytoluene (μg) | 0.132 (1886) | 0.007 | |
| eicosane, 2-methyl (μg) | 0.05 (357) | 0.014 | |
| heneicosane, 2-methyl (μg) | 0.063 (300) | 0.021 | |
| nitrogen compounds | |||
| 2-formyl-1-methylpyrrole (μg) | 0.128 (200) | 0.064 | |
| 4( | 0.296
(264) | 0.112 | |
| isoquinoline, 3-methyl (μg) | 6.29 (126) | 4.99 | |
| maltoxazine (μg) | 0.077 (203) | 0.038 | |
| pyridoxin (μg) | 0.699 (133) | 0.526 | |
| other constituents | |||
| 1,2-propanediol, 3-chloro (μg) | 9.94 (168) | 5.93 | |
| 1 | 0.026 (186) | 0.014 | |
| 3-chloro-1,2-propanediol (μg) | 16.1 (196) | 8.21 | |
| 0.061 | not detected | ||
| ergosterol (μg) | 3.18 (201) | 1.58 | |
| labdane-8,15-diol, (13S) (μg) | 0.143 (953) | 0.015 | |
| lanost-8-en-3-ol, 24-methylene-, (3beta) (μg) | 6.3 (391) | 1.61 | |
| α-cembratriene-diol (μg) | 8.49 (2160) | 0.393 | |
| 0.786 (244) | 0.322 | ||
| other oxygenated compounds | |||
| furfural (μg) | 31.1 (120) | 47.4 (124) | 25.9–38.3 |
| 2.09 (4750) | 0.044 | ||
| 1-acetyloxy-2-propanone (μg) | 12.2 (132) | 9.23 | |
| 2-monoacetin (μg) | 46.8 (156) | 30 | |
| 1,2,3-propanetriol, diacetate (diacetin) (μg) | 1.23 (323) | 0.381 | |
| 1,4-dioxane, 2-ethyl-5-methyl (μg) | 0.055 (13750) | 0.0004 | |
| 12,14-labdadiene-7,8-diol, (8a,12E) (μg) | 1.43 (2234) | 0.064 | |
| 1-hydroxy-2-butanone (μg) | 0.947 (204) | 0.465 | |
| 1-hydroxy-2-propanone(1,2-propenediol) (μg) | 162 (167) | 1135 (226) | 96.8–502 |
| 2 (5 | 5.32 (267) | 1.99 | |
| 2 | 8.16 (196) | 4.13 | |
| 2,3-dihydro-5-hydroxy-6-methyl-4 | 0.231 (171) | 0.135 | |
| 2-cyclopentene-1,4-dione (μg) | 3.8 (497) | 8.4 (418) | 0.764–2.01 |
| 2,4-dimethylcyclopent-4-ene-1,3-dione (μg) | 0.333 (173) | 0.193 | |
| 2(5 | 5.45 (256) | 2.13 | |
| 2-furanmethanol (μg) | 39.2 (560) | 37.5 (396) | 7–9.47 |
| 2-furanmethanol, 5-methyl (μg) | 0.123 (424) | 0.029 | |
| 2 | 4.45 (143) | 3.11 | |
| 2-methylcyclobutane-1,3-dione (μg) | 2.78 (392) | 0.71 | |
| 2-propanone, 1-(acetyloxy) (μg) | 16.9 (211) | 8.01 | |
| 3 (2 | 0.326 (274) | 0.119 | |
| 5-methylfurfural (μg) | 0.995 (157) | 14.2 (270) | 0.632–5.25 |
| anhydro linalool oxide (μg) | 0.457 (157) | 0.291 | |
| benzenemethanol, 4-hydroxy (μg) | 0.011 | not detected | |
| butyrolactone (μg) | 4.08 (560) | 4.8 (444) | 0.728–1.08 |
| cyclohexane, 1,2-dioxo (μg) | 0.083 (180) | 0.046 | |
| cyclohexane-1,2-dione, 3-methyl (μg) | 0.101 (138) | 0.073 | |
| ethyl 2,4-dioxohexanoate (μg) | 6.73 (189) | 3.57 | |
| isolinderanolide (μg) | 4.99 (270) | 1.85 | |
| methyl furoate (μg) | 0.147 (507) | 0.029 | |
| pyranone (μg) | 6.54 (129) | 51.4 (116) | 5.07–44.5 |
| pyranone (μg) | 9.26 (159) | 5.84 | |
The results compare the yields from an IQOS stick with the reference 3R4F cigarette, however, on an equivalent tobacco basis, the IQOS yields should be multiplied by at least 3.2. HCI, Health Canada Intense smoking regimen.
Compound in IQOS aerosol as a percentage of amount in 3R4F reference cigarette smoke.
Comparison of Background PAHs of IQOS (THS 2.2) Tobacco Stick to the Deliveries in the Emissions and 3R4F Reference Cigarette Smokea
| Goujon
et al.[ | Schaller
et al.[ | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IQOS
tobacco background PAH (ng/stick) | deliveries
in emission/smoke HCI (ng of stick/ng of 3R4F cigarette) | |||||
| sample | benzo[a]pyrene | pyrene | benzo[a]anthracene | benzo[a]pyrene | pyrene | benzo[a]anthracene |
| FR1 | 16.6 | 82.1 | 22.5 | 1.02 | 8.01 | 2.64 |
| A | 118.8 | 1381.7 | 347 | 9.10 | 185.65 | 45.66 |
| B | 56.9 | 243 | 91.2 | 4.34 | 25.26 | 13.33 |
| C | <0.06 | 12.5 | <0.05 | 0.35 | 4.50 | 1.02 |
| D | 48.4 | 568.7 | 138.9 | 3.97 | 63.30 | 20.52 |
| E | <0.06 | 18.1 | <0.05 | 0.55 | 4.71 | 1.09 |
| 3R4F | 15.0 | 79.3 | 27.2 | |||
FRI: THS 2.2 regular blend of air cured, bright flue-cured and aromatic oriental (sun-cured) tobaccos, same as FR1 monitor blend in Schaller et al.[38] A: Aromatic fire-cured tobacco, same as AR1 in Schaller et al.[38] B: Flue-cured bright tobacco, same as FC5 in Schaller et al.[38] C: Flue-cured bright tobacco, same as FC6 in Schaller et al.[38] D – Blend of flue-cured and aromatic fire cured tobaccos, same as BL1 in Schaller et al.[38] E: Blend of flue-cured and aromatic oriental sun-cured tobaccos, same as BL11 in Schaller et al.[38] 3R4F: University of Kentucky reference cigarette, blend of flue-cured, air-cured (Burley and Maryland), oriental (sun-cured) and reconstituted tobaccos. HCI: Health Canada intense smoking regimen. PAHs:Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Data from both studies were from Supporting Information except 3R4F data, which was in main article of Schaller et al.[38]