Smoke without fire? Researchers question heated tobacco products

Industry Insight
Jul.22.2022

Heated tobacco products have soared in popularity as a "smoke free" alternative to cigarettes in recent years, but a peer-reviewed report has suggested their emissions could be considered smoke—a claim strongly rejected by the tobacco industry.

 

Smoke without fire? Researchers question heated tobacco products

Heated tobacco products, or HTPs, are often confused with e-cigarettes, which heat liquid that can contain nicotine but do not involve tobacco leaf.

HTPs instead use a high heat to decompose tobacco, via a process called pyrolysis, which does not set it on fire or burn it, therefore avoiding creating smoke.

 

The most popular and widely available HTP, Philip Morris International's IQOS, is an electronic device that heats a tobacco-filled, paper-wrapped, cigarette-like stick at a temperature of up to 350 degrees Celsius (662 degrees Fahrenheit).

 

Last month a review of the available research by experts in pyrolysis from Britain's Nottingham University found "chemical evidence that IQOS emissions fit the definition of both an aerosol and smoke."

 

The paper, published in the American Chemical Society's Omega journal, was funded by the STOP anti-tobacco initiative.

Its lead author Clement Uguna said that IQOS emissions contain chemical compounds that are "in normal tobacco smoke, bush burning and wood smoke".

 

"Hence smoke arises simply by heating organic substances and does not necessarily involve fire," he told AFP.

 

The paper also found that previous research on IQOS—the majority of which has been funded by the tobacco industry—had compared a stick to a typical cigarette.

 

However IQOS sticks are much smaller, containing around 200 milligrams of tobacco compared to 645 milligrams for a standard cigarette, it said.

 

Because research by Philip Morris International (PMI) did not use a "like against like" comparison, it "underestimated" the levels of harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHCs) from IQOS, the review added.

 

PMI said the level of HPHCs in IQOS emissions—per stick—was "reduced on average by 90-95 percent compared to cigarette smoke".

 

However that level fell to 68 percent when comparing the tobacco content of the two products, the Nottingham University experts said, calling for more research.

 

'Not smoke': PMI

 

PMI told AFP that the paper "misleadingly leverages pieces of the scientific assessment while omitting other important pieces of evidence".

 

"Numerous international combustion experts and a number of government agencies have reviewed the same evidence package and concluded that the IQOS aerosol produced is not smoke," it said.

 

Reto Auer, a doctor at Germany's University of Bern who has previously researched heated tobacco, praised the Omega paper, telling AFP it was "one of the rare reports to dare to tackle the question of 'smoke' so deeply".

 

Jamie Hartmann-Boyce of the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine at Oxford University, an author of a highly regarded review on HTP science published earlier this year, said the "important" paper "made some very good points".

 

"I think mechanistically there are a lot of reasons to suspect HTPs might be more harmful than e-cigarettes and possibly less harmful than traditional cigarettes—but we really need more data," she told AFP.

 

'Difficult balance'

 

IQOS is available in more than 60 countries under widely varying regulations, and sticks come in flavours such as menthol, cherry and grape, which critics say help attract younger users.

 

Last month the European Commission proposed banning flavoured HTP varieties after stick sales in the EU soared more than 2,000 percent—from 934 million to nearly 20 billion—between 2018 and 2020.

 

PMI told AFP that the "proposal from the Commission is not underpinned by evidence".

 

"It fails to prove, for instance, that flavours pose any additional health risks or that they attract a significant proportion of non-nicotine users," it said.

 

Hartmann-Boyce said "there is every reason to be concerned about the extent to which the tobacco industry is manipulating the science and messages around new tobacco products."

 

But she warned it was a "difficult balance" to communicate the risks of such products because of the overwhelming damage done by cigarettes. Tobacco kills half its users, according to the World Health Organization.

 

"If we say something is safer than cigarettes, that is not saying it's safe—it's like saying that this knife is safer than a loaded gun," Hartmann-Boyce said.

 

The content excerpted or reproduced in this article comes from a third-party, and the copyright belongs to the original media and author. If any infringement is found, please contact us to delete it. Any entity or individual wishing to forward the information, please contact the author and refrain from forwarding directly from here.

China Tobacco International (HK) Announces FY2025 Results: Revenue Reaches HK$14.58 Billion, Up 11.5% Year-on-Year
China Tobacco International (HK) Announces FY2025 Results: Revenue Reaches HK$14.58 Billion, Up 11.5% Year-on-Year
China Tobacco International (HK) Company Limited announced its audited results for the year ended December 31, 2025. Revenue was HK$14.58 billion, profit before taxation was HK$1.28 billion, and profit attributable to owners of the Company was HK$0.98 billion, with basic and diluted EPS of HK$1.42. The Board proposed a final dividend of HK$0.33 per share; together with an interim dividend of HK$0.19 per share, the full-year dividend totaled HK$0.52 per share.
Mar.06 by 2FIRSTS.ai
New York Says Seized Illegal Vape Shipment Had Retail Value of USD 2.2 Million to USD 3.5 Million
New York Says Seized Illegal Vape Shipment Had Retail Value of USD 2.2 Million to USD 3.5 Million
New York state health officials said a joint operation last week involving the State Department of Health, Nassau County police and local health officials intercepted about 14 tons of illegal vape products that were intended for local distributors and smoke shops.
Mar.20 by 2FIRSTS.ai
Product | GEEKBAR Adds Two High-Puff Devices to Its Website: Clio Platinum 50K Goes on Sale in the U.S., SOMAX 80K Expands to the Middle East
Product | GEEKBAR Adds Two High-Puff Devices to Its Website: Clio Platinum 50K Goes on Sale in the U.S., SOMAX 80K Expands to the Middle East
Vape brand GEEKBAR has listed two products on its official website—the Geek Bar Clio Platinum 50K and the GEEKBAR SOMAX 80K. The Clio Platinum 50K has already launched across U.S. online retailers, with pricing around US$23.99. The SOMAX 80K is positioned for the Middle East market and had previously been sold in Canada under the name “STLTH X GEEK BAR 80K.”
Feb.09 by 2FIRSTS.ai
Surrey councillor calls for tougher vape sales controls, seeking the “most restrictive legally supportable” package
Surrey councillor calls for tougher vape sales controls, seeking the “most restrictive legally supportable” package
Surrey Councillor Gordon Hepner presented a notice of motion calling on council to “wage war on vaping” by strengthening controls on the sale of vaping products in the city, citing vaping as a “serious health concern,” especially among youth. Hepner said the motion directs staff to bring back the “most restrictive legally supportable” package from the City’s 2019 bylaw work to materially reduce where and how vape products can be sold, including licensing controls and enforcement.
Feb.10 by 2FIRSTS.ai
India Tobacco Board urges Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman to revisit cigarette duty hike
India Tobacco Board urges Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman to revisit cigarette duty hike
The Tobacco Board, under the administrative control of India’s Department of Commerce, has written to Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman (Nirmala Sitharaman) flagging the adverse impact of an “unprecedented” increase in cigarette excise duties on the industry and on millions of farmers and workers, and urging a revision of duty rates.
Feb.11 by 2FIRSTS.ai
JTI UK Updates Nordic Spirit Packaging to Strengthen “Strength and Flavour” Guidance
JTI UK Updates Nordic Spirit Packaging to Strengthen “Strength and Flavour” Guidance
Japan Tobacco International UK (JTI UK) has unveiled a refreshed brand identity for Nordic Spirit nicotine pouches. The new packaging is now live on JTI360 and will roll out to shelves over the coming months. The updated design strengthens on-pack guidance on strength and flavour, adding slower/faster release cues and a six-dot strength system (6–17mg). Each can contains 20 pouches and includes a lid compartment for storing used pouches before disposal.
Mar.04 by 2FIRSTS.ai