| Nicotine
Up Sharply In Many Cigarettes
Some
Brands More Than 30% Stronger!
By David Brown, Washington
Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 31, 2006 - Washington
Post
The amount
of nicotine in most cigarettes rose an average of almost 10 percent
from 1998 to 2004, with brands most popular with young people and
minorities registering the biggest increases and highest nicotine
content, according to a new study.
Nicotine is highly
addictive, and while no one has studied the effect of the increases
on smokers, the higher levels theoretically could make new smokers
more easily addicted and make it harder for established smokers
to quit.
The trend was discovered
by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, which requires
that tobacco companies measure the nicotine content of cigarettes
each year and report the results.
As measured using
a method that mimics actual smoking, the nicotine delivered per
cigarette -- the "yield" -- rose 9.9 percent from 1998
to 2004 -- from 1.72 milligrams to 1.89. The total nicotine content
increased an average of 16.6 percent in that period, and the amount
of nicotine per gram of tobacco increased 11.3 percent.
The study, reported
by the Boston Globe, found that 92 of 116 brands tested had higher
nicotine yields in 2004 than in 1998, and 52 had increases of more
than 10 percent.
Boxes of Doral lights,
a low-tar brand made by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., had the biggest
increase in yield, 36 percent. Some of this may have been the result
of an increase in the total amount of tobacco put in that brand's
cigarettes, one expert said.
The nicotine in Marlboro
products, preferred by two-thirds of high school smokers, increased
12 percent. Kool lights increased 30 percent. Two-thirds of African
American smokers use menthol brands.
Not only did most
brands have more nicotine in 2004, the number of brands with very
high nicotine yields also rose.
In 1998, Newport
100s and unfiltered Camels were tied for highest nicotine yield
at 2.9 milligrams. In 2004, Newport had risen to 3.2 milligrams,
and five brands measured 3 milligrams or higher.
"The reports
are stunning," said Matthew L. Myers, president of the Campaign
for Tobacco-Free Kids. "What's critical is the consistency
of the increase, which leads to the conclusion that it has to have
been conscious and deliberate."
"People need
to be aware of this," said Sally Fogerty, Massachusetts's associate
commissioner for community health. "If a person is trying to
quit and is having a hard time, it's not just them. There is an
increasing percentage of nicotine that they are ingesting, and that
may make it more difficult."
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention also focused on the potential behavioral
consequences of the finding.
"We know nicotine
is addictive, so if the amount of nicotine in cigarettes is increasing,
it could make it even harder for the 70 percent of smokers who want
to quit and the more than 40 percent who try to quit every year,"
Corinne Husten, acting director of the CDC's Office on Smoking and
Health, said in an e-mail message.
No spokesman for
a tobacco company would speak on the record about the Massachusetts
findings yesterday.
One company official,
speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that while the nicotine
content measured by smoking machines can vary by up to 6 percent
between individual cigarettes of the same brand, "we don't
know" whether an entire brand's production could differ that
much from year to year.
But in a 1,653-page
opinion released two weeks ago in a landmark suit against the major
tobacco companies by the federal government and several anti-smoking
organizations, the judge found that cigarette makers adjusted nicotine
levels with great care.
"Using the knowledge
produced by that research, defendants have designed their cigarettes
to precisely control nicotine delivery levels and provide doses
of nicotine sufficient to create and sustain addiction," wrote
U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler.
The ruling enjoined
the companies from misinforming the public about tobacco's hazards.
The companies are uncertain what that means and cited the ruling
yesterday as the chief reason for their silence. Reynolds and Lorillard
Tobacco Co. have also temporarily shut down their Web sites.
Reginald V. Fant,
a clinical pharmacologist and nicotine expert at Pinney Associates,
a consulting firm in Bethesda, said increasing nicotine content
by 10 percent "would not be expected" to change how much
a person smokes but could affect his ability to quit.
"We know that
physiologically the changes in the nicotine receptors in the brain
are related to the amount of nicotine consumed," he said.
Neal Benowitz, a
physician and pharmacologist at the University of California at
San Francisco, said, "I don't think we know what the consequences
are for the population in terms of addictive behavior and how hard
it is for people to quit."
Myers said the Massachusetts
findings are evidence that tobacco products should be more strictly
regulated.
"The only way
the companies were able to secretly increase nicotine levels without
anyone knowing about it is because no federal agency regulates tobacco
products," he said.
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