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Study: Light cigarettes fail to
cut lung cancer risk
London -
Low-tar cigarettes do not carry a lower risk of lung cancer, according
to the first study comparing lung cancer deaths among smokers of
ultra-light, mild and medium filtered cigarettes.
The finding, published this week in
the British Medical Journal, proves what experts long suspected.
Previous research has found smokers
of "lighter" cigarettes compensate by taking deeper drags, holding the
smoke longer and smoking more cigarettes. Scientists suspected they
would probably be just as vulnerable to lung cancer and other diseases
as those who smoke harsher varieties.
"It's not surprising, but it's very
important," said Stan Glantz, a professor of cardiology at the
University of California, San Francisco, who was not involved with the
research. "It's always important to demonstrate whether a theoretical
prediction is right or wrong."
Tobacco industry representatives said
manufacturers never claimed light or mild cigarettes were safer, and
don't dispute the study's findings.
The study, conducted by scientists at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the American Cancer Society,
examined the link between the tar rating of the cigarette smoked in
1982 and deaths from lung cancer in the subsequent six years among
940,774 Americans over the age of 30 who were smokers, former smokers
or had never smoked.
Those who smoked strong non-filtered
cigarettes had a higher risk of lung cancer than those who smoked
conventional filtered cigarettes.
However, the study found no
difference in the lung cancer death rate among those who smoked the
medium filtered cigarettes and those who used mild or ultra light
varieties.
The results held true after other
factors known to influence lung cancer, such as age, education level,
intake of fruits and vegetables, and duration of smoking, had been
taken into account.
The findings were the same for men
and women.
"There was not a shred of evidence of
reduced risk," said investigator Michael Thun, epidemiology chief at
the American Cancer Society. "The ultra light haven't been used as
long as the light and it is possible that some difference in risk
might emerge with longer term use of the ultra light, but this is
very, very solid for the low tar."
Thun
and Glantz said the findings will bolster the lawsuits of U.S.
plaintiffs who are suing tobacco companies on the grounds of consumer
fraud. The cases allege that smokers were duped into believing that
low-tar cigarettes were less hazardous.
Lower-tar cigarette varieties were
developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Tim Lord, chief executive of the
London-based Tobacco Manufacturers Association, said this was in
response to government calls, because government scientists believed
that they might reduce the risks.
In the United States, industry was
similarly encouraged by health authorities to develop cigarettes
yielding less tar, in the hope that such a move would reduce the
risks, said Steve Kottak, spokesman for Kentucky-based cigarette maker
Brown & Williamson.
Tar levels were classified by using a
smoking machine. The low tar cigarettes, with more porous paper and
ventilation holes around the filter, scored lower on the machine.
However, scientists later discovered
the machine did not accurately reflect what happens when people smoke.
Smokers of light cigarettes tended to cover up the perforations, draw
harder on the cigarettes and compensate in other ways that meant they
got the same kick as from regular cigarettes.
"This was not a dastardly plot by the
tobacco industry to launch products on health claims," Lord said. "We
never claimed it to be safer and we did it at the request of the
government. We were even asked to spend more of our advertising and
promotional pounds to promote the lighter products than the stronger
products."
In 2001 the European Union banned the
use of language such as "mild," "light" and "low tar" on cigarette
packs, and a global anti-smoking treaty passed last year by the World
Health Organization also limits the use of such terms.
-- CNN News
Brudirect.com
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