Toxicology Reports (Jan 2014)

Custom mentholation of commercial cigarettes for research purposes

  • Ian C. MacGregor,
  • Stephen B. Stanfill,
  • Sydney M. Gordon,
  • Douglas J. Turner,
  • Jenny M. Butler,
  • Elizabeth A. Hanft,
  • Hyoshin Kim,
  • Robyn R. Kroeger,
  • Marielle C. Brinkman,
  • Margaret E. Tefft,
  • Pamela I. Clark,
  • Stephanie S. Buehler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxrep.2014.10.009
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. C
pp. 1068 – 1075

Abstract

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In the U.S. menthol remains the sole permitted characterizing cigarette flavor additive in part because efforts to link menthol cigarette use to increased tobacco-related disease risk have been inconclusive. To perform definitive studies, cigarettes that differ only in menthol content are required, yet these are not commercially available. We prepared research cigarettes differing only in menthol content by deposition of l-menthol vapor directly onto commercial nonmenthol cigarettes, and developed a method to measure a cigarette's menthol and nicotine content. With our custom-mentholation technique we achieved the desired moderately high menthol content (as compared to commercial brands) of 6.7 ± 1.0 mg/g (n = 25) without perturbing the cigarettes’ nicotine content (17.7 ± 0.7 mg/g [n = 25]). We also characterized other pertinent attributes of our custom-mentholated cigarettes, including percent transmission of menthol and nicotine to mainstream smoke and the rate of loss of menthol over time during storage at room temperature. We are currently using this simple mentholation technique to investigate the differences in human exposure to selected chemicals in cigarette smoke due only to the presence of the added menthol. Our cigarettes will also aid in the elucidation of the effects of menthol on the toxicity of tobacco smoke.

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