Tobacco Induced Diseases (Mar 2024)

Comparison of emissions across tobacco products: A slippery slope in tobacco control

  • Ahmad El Hellani,
  • Ayomipo Adeniji,
  • Hanno C. Erythropel,
  • Qixin Wang,
  • Thomas Lamb,
  • Vladimir B. Mikheev,
  • Irfan Rahman,
  • Irina Stepanov,
  • Robert M. Strongin,
  • Theodore L. Wagener,
  • Marielle C. Brinkman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18332/tid/183797
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. March
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

In this narrative review, we highlight the challenges of comparing emissions from different tobacco products under controlled laboratory settings (using smoking/ vaping machines). We focus on tobacco products that generate inhalable smoke or aerosol, such as cigarettes, cigars, hookah, electronic cigarettes, and heated tobacco products. We discuss challenges associated with sample generation including variability of smoking/vaping machines, lack of standardized adaptors that connect smoking/vaping machines to different tobacco products, puffing protocols that are not representative of actual use, and sample generation session length (minutes or number of puffs) that depends on product characteristics. We also discuss the challenges of physically characterizing and trapping emissions from products with different aerosol characteristics. Challenges to analytical method development are also covered, highlighting matrix effects, order of magnitude differences in analyte levels, and the necessity of tailored quality control/quality assurance measures. The review highlights two approaches in selecting emissions to monitor across products, one focusing on toxicants that were detected and quantified with optimized methods for combustible cigarettes, and the other looking for productspecific toxicants using non-targeted analysis. The challenges of data reporting and statistical analysis that allow meaningful comparison across products are also discussed. We end the review by highlighting that even if the technical challenges are overcome, emission comparison may obscure the absolute exposure from novel products if we only focus on relative exposure compared to combustible products.

Keywords