Category: News This Week

  • WHO Urged to Adjust its Vapor Stance

    WHO Urged to Adjust its Vapor Stance

    Photo: ekim

    One hundred tobacco harm reduction (THR) experts have published a joint letter challenging the World Health Organization’s (WHO) approach to tobacco science and policy. The group is urging members of the Ninth Session of the Conference of the Parties (COP-9) of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) to encourage the WHO to support and promote the inclusion of tobacco harm reduction into its regulatory advisements.

    “Smoke-free nicotine products offer a promising route to reducing the harms arising from smoking. There is compelling evidence that smoke-free products are much less harmful than cigarettes and that they can displace smoking for individuals and at the population level,” the letter states. “Regrettably, WHO has been dismissive of the potential to transform the tobacco market from high-risk to low-risk products. WHO is rejecting a public health strategy that could avoid millions of smoking-related deaths.”

    The letter was published on Oct. 18 and will be sent to COP-9 delegates. In a joint statement, Ruth Bonita, former director of WHO Department of NCD Surveillance, and Robert Beaglehole, former director of the WHO Department of Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, stated that they were “extremely disappointed by WHO’s illogical and perverse approach” to reduced-harm nicotine delivery products, such as vaping.

    “A key challenge in global tobacco control is to assist cigarette smokers to transition from burnt tobacco products to much less harmful options that provide the nicotine without the toxic smoke,” the statement reads. “WHO’s continuing disregard of the wealth of evidence on the value of these products is condemning millions of smokers to preventable disease and premature death.”

    The letter goes on to make seven points about the current vaping regulatory environment, such as the value of vaping in THR and the unintended consequences of poor regulatory policies. The authors then go on to make six suggestions for the WHO to consider:

    • Make tobacco harm reduction a component of the global strategy to meet the Sustainable Development Goals for health, notably SDG 3.4 on non-communicable diseases.
    • Insist that any WHO policy analysis makes a proper assessment of benefits to smokers or would-be smokers, including adolescents, as well as risks to users and non-users of these products.
    • Require any policy proposals, particularly prohibitions, to reflect the risks of unintended consequences, including potential increases in smoking and other adverse responses.
    • Properly apply Article 5.3 of the FCTC to address genuine tobacco industry malpractice, but not to create a counterproductive barrier to reduced-risk products that have public health benefits or to prevent critical assessment of industry data strictly on its scientific merits.
    • Make the FCTC negotiations more open to stakeholders with harm-reduction perspectives, including consumers, public health experts, and some businesses with significant specialized knowledge not held within the traditional tobacco control community.
    • Initiate an independent review of WHO and the FCTC approach to tobacco policy in the context of the SDGs. Such a review could address the interpretation and use of science, the quality of policy advice, stakeholder engagement, and accountability and governance. The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response (IPPPR), initiated to evaluate the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, offers such a model.

    In a separate statement, David Sweanor, adjunct professor of law, chair of the Advisory Board of the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics University of Ottawa, Canada, said that effective public health efforts need to be based on science, reason and humanism. Instead, he noted, the WHO is aligning itself against all three when dealing with nicotine.

    “The result is that one of the greatest opportunities to improve global health, separating nicotine use from smoke inhalation, is being squandered. Global trust in health authorities, and the WHO in particular, has never been so important,” the statement reads. “Yet the WHO is abandoning science, rationality and humanism on nicotine and instead apparently pursuing the moralistic abstinence-only agenda of external funders. This is a public health tragedy that extends well beyond the unnecessary sickening of the billion-plus people who smoke cigarettes.”

  • Journal to Examine Tobacco Industry Transformation

    Journal to Examine Tobacco Industry Transformation

    Photo: Olivier Le Moal

    Nicotine & Tobacco Research is calling for papers that examine the tobacco industry’s move from producing and selling hazardous tobacco products toward less-harmful alternatives.

    In recent years, an increasing number of tobacco companies have announced their intention to reduce their dependence on income from combustible tobacco products. Market leader Philip Morris International, for example, has since 2018 variously claimed to be building “a smokefree future,” and “unsmoking” the world.

    The journal is preparing a special themed issue that will examine whether a transformed tobacco industry is possible, what a transformed tobacco company would look like and whether there is evidence that the tobacco industry is transforming in any meaningful sense.

    Nicotine & Tobacco Research is inviting submission on papers exploring relevant issues, such as how progress toward industry transformation should be measured and the ethics of tobacco industry transformation.

    Manuscripts must be submitted through the journal’s submission system by March 1. 2022.

    Nicotine & Tobacco Research will not consider for publication papers submitted by tobacco industry employees or affiliated organizations, including organizations that themselves receive funding from or that are fully or partially owned by a tobacco company.

    Nicotine & Tobacco Research is sponsored by the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. The journal expects to publish its themed in early 2023.

  • Triton May Sell ENDS Pending MDO Review

    Triton May Sell ENDS Pending MDO Review

    Photo: denissimonov

    Wages and White Lion Investments, parent to Triton Distribution, may continue to market its electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) devices in the U.S. until its appeal against the Food and Drug Administration’s marketing denial orders (MDO) has been evaluated in court.

    On Oct. 15, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit put the MDO on hold pending review. The judges also granted motions to expedite the appeal case and a ruling for emergency relief.

    Triton Distribution filed a motion to stay after the FDA denied the company’s premarket tobacco product application. The company claims that it had been irreparably harmed as a result of the FDA’s actions and faced an imminent shutdown of its business.

    In its motion, Triton contends that the FDA retroactively changed the requirements for PMTAs. “By imposing a new, across-the-board requirement that flavored ENDS products be demonstrably more effective at promoting smoking cessation than otherwise identical tobacco-flavored products, FDA acted contrary to its authority under Section 910 of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (“FDCA), 21 U.S.C. § 387j, and not in accordance with law,” Triton wrote.

    At least six companies have filed lawsuits challenging the agency’s decision to make the companies remove their products from the market. Last week, the FDA rescinded the MDO issued to Turning Point Brands and the company will be allowed to continue marketing its vapor products while the FDA re-reviews the company’s PMTA.

  • Experts Challenge WHO Stance on Safer Nicotine

    Experts Challenge WHO Stance on Safer Nicotine

    Photo: Tom

    The Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction (GSTHR), a Knowledge-Action-Change (KAC) project, launches a new series of briefing papers ahead of the publication of its latest report, Fighting The Last War: The WHO and International Tobacco Control, on Oct. 27.

    The suite of new GSTHR publications aims to draw attention to, and challenge the direction of travel of, the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) ninth Conference of the Parties (COP9), a major global meeting on tackling smoking. The meeting is being held virtually in early November. According to the GSTHR, the FCTC agenda and briefing papers indicate the FCTC secretariat and leadership are continuing to urge parties against the adoption of tobacco harm reduction approaches that could help save millions of lives.

    The GSTHR briefing papers offer analyses, commentaries or explainers on topics related to tobacco harm reduction and its role in combating the death and disease caused by smoking.

    The first paper provides a brief overview of both the FCTC and the Conference of the Parties biennial meetings, explaining their role in global tobacco and nicotine policy as well as highlighting some of the problematic elements of their current operation. A deeper analysis of these issues will be revealed when Fighting The Last War is published later in the month.

    The second GSTHR briefing paper focuses on the U.K.’s potential leadership role at COP9. According to the GSTHR, the U.K. has successfully implemented important aspects of a domestic tobacco harm reduction policy while retaining a strong tobacco control record. Currently, the FCTC project does not reflect the U.K. approach—yet the U.K. is one of the most consistent and generous financial backers of both the FCTC and the WHO. At COP9, the paper argues, the U.K. must be prepared to take a strong line and advocate for policies it has enacted that are demonstrably increasing the numbers of people successfully quitting smoking.

    These issues and more will be explored in depth in the GSTHR’s forthcoming report, to be published on Oct. 27 at a hybrid launch event, free to attend online. In Fighting The Last War: The WHO and International Tobacco Control, the report’s author, Harry Shapiro, takes a close look at the history, development and often secretive processes of the FCTC COP, its early battles with the tobacco industry—and the range of influences shaping international tobacco control’s response to safer nicotine products in 2021.

    The report launch will be broadcast on Oct. 27 from the Kia Oval in London. Two roundtable sessions will be livestreamed from 11 a.m. British Summer Time, with time allowed for questions from those watching in the room and from afar. Will Godfrey of Filter will host the first session, “The FCTC: Past, Present and Future,” which features Harry Shapiro, KAC report author; Derek Yach, Foundation for a Smoke-Free World, former WHO cabinet director and executive director for noncommunicable diseases and mental health; and Tom Gleeson of the New Nicotine Alliance Ireland.

    The second session will be hosted by Jeannie Cameron of JCIC Consulting and will be centered on the “Challenges to making the FCTC an inclusive international framework convention.” Audience members will hear from Ethan Nadelmann, founder of the Drug Policy Alliance; Nataliia Toropova from Healthy Initiatives and Professor Gerry Stimson, director of KAC.

    Parties to the FCTC must seize the opportunity to consider evidence from countries where tobacco harm reduction is succeeding, including the U.K., New Zealand, Sweden, Norway and Japan.

    “We’re gravely concerned by the WHO’s continued rejection of tobacco harm reduction,” said Stimson. “It already accepts harm reduction as a valid evidence-based public health intervention for drug use and HIV/AIDS. Harm reduction is explicitly named as one of three tobacco control strategies in the opening lines of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Adoption could hasten the end of the public health crisis caused by smoking.

    “Instead, the WHO rejects and, worse, repeatedly misinforms the public about safer nicotine products, demonstrating a disregard both for the lives of over one billion adult smokers and the eight million deaths each year due to smoking. Parties to the FCTC must seize the opportunity at COP9 to consider evidence from countries where tobacco harm reduction is succeeding, including the U.K., New Zealand, Sweden, Norway and Japan—and ask why the WHO and its influential financial backers are refusing to do the same.” 

  • Biden Eyes Robert Califf as FDA Head

    Biden Eyes Robert Califf as FDA Head

    Robert Califf

    U.S. President Joe Biden is likely to nominate Food and Drug Administration veteran Robert Califf to lead the agency, reports The Washington Post. A cardiologist who teaches at the Duke University School of Medicine, Califf was the FDA’s deputy commissioner for medical products and tobacco before leading it from February 2016 to January 2017.

    The FDA has been without a permanent chief since President Biden took office. Its acting commissioner, Janet Woodcock, is nearing the end of the term that acting officials are allowed to serve.

    While some praised Califf as a strong and experienced candidate, others criticized his ties to the pharmaceutical industry.

    “Rob Califf would be a strong, experienced and effective commissioner,” former FDA Commissioner Mark McClellan was quoted as saying by Politico.

    “The country desperately needs an FDA leader who will reverse the decades-long trend in which the agency’s relationship with the pharmaceutical and medical device industries has grown dangerously cozier—resulting in regulatory capture of the agency by industry,” countered Michael Carome, director of Public Citizen’s Health Research Group. “Califf would not be that leader.”

  • BAT Commits to Net Zero Emissions by 2050

    BAT Commits to Net Zero Emissions by 2050

    Photo: Olivier Le Moal

    BAT has signed up for the U.N.-backed Race to Zero campaign, committing to net zero emissions by 2050.

    Race to Zero is the largest-ever alliance committed to halving global emissions by 2030 and achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050. The campaign represents more than 4,000 businesses estimated to cover nearly 25 percent of global CO2 emissions and more than 50 percent of GDP. BAT’s commitment comes ahead of important global milestones in the fight to address climate change, including the G20 Summit in October and the COP26 conference in Glasgow on climate change in November.

    “Our purpose of building ‘A Better Tomorrow’ ensures that sustainability is front and center in all we do,” said BAT Chief Marketing Officer Kingsley Wheaton in a statement. “We are proud, therefore, to support the Race to Zero campaign. This is in addition to our New Categories journey—with Vuse, Glo and Velo—and our ambition to have £5 billion of New Category revenue by 2025 and 50 million noncombustible product users by 2030.”

  • Litigation Spikes With Rise of New Products

    Litigation Spikes With Rise of New Products

    Image: inimalGraphic

    Litigation over intellectual property relating to nicotine products has risen more than 10-fold since 2015, reports The Wall Street Journal, citing data from Maxval and Lexis Nexis.

    The increase in patent litigation appears to be related to tobacco companies’ intensified search for smoking alternatives.

    In September, the U.S. International Trade Commission ruled that Philip Morris International and Altria must stop imports of IQOS heated-tobacco sticks due to a patent dispute with R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, which is owned by British American Tobacco. The case is now in review and can be appealed. But in the worst-case scenario, IQOS will be banned from the lucrative American tobacco market.

    PMI and BAT are furthest ahead in their shift to smoke-free technologies with respective targets to derive more than half and one-fifth of net revenue from less harmful products by the middle of the decade. They are also among the most active litigants.

    The two have a patent dispute pending in Japan, another key market for smokeless products. And although September’s U.S. ruling went in BAT’s favor, the British firm recently lost disputes against its rival in the United Kingdom and Poland.

  • ‘Vuse Authorization a Positive for Harm Reduction’

    ‘Vuse Authorization a Positive for Harm Reduction’

    Photo: R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co.

    More governments need to follow the science.

    By Derek Yach

    The evidence is in. For the first time, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has authorized the marketing of an e-cigarette in the country because it determined the help it offers adult smokers outweighs the attraction such products may hold for youth.

    The decision to allow the sale of British American Tobacco’s Vuse Solo closed electronic nicotine-delivery system, along with three tobacco-flavored cartridges, marks the third time in less than two years that the agency, despite vociferous, emotion-driven opposition from politicians and interest groups, has used peer-reviewed scientific evidence to approve tobacco harm reduction (THR) products.

    With this latest move, the FDA has signaled a distinct turn in the oft-contentious debate surrounding e-cigarettes, in which opponents claim little is known about what toxic chemicals they contain and that the tobacco industry has a terrible track record when it comes to being forthcoming about its products.

    That was not the case here, indicated Mitch Zeller, the director of the agency’s Center for Tobacco Products. “Today’s authorizations are an important step toward ensuring all new tobacco products undergo the FDA’s robust scientific premarket evaluation,” he said in a statement. “The manufacturer’s data demonstrates its tobacco-flavored products could benefit adult smokers who switch to these products—either completely or with a significant reduction in cigarette consumption—by reducing their exposure to harmful chemicals.”

    We have said it before, and we’ll continue to say it again (and again and again) in the face of all this misinformed vitriol and distrust: THR products are effective tools to help smokers lessen their risk of developing diseases such as lung cancer and COPD. So says one study after the next, including a recent measured, sober look at the risks and benefits of e-cigarettes that is signed by no less than 15 former presidents of the Society for Research into Nicotine and Tobacco, a leading international proponent of evidence-based science.

    The key word here is “evidence.” Although e-cigarettes are not risk-free, they have been found to be up to 95 percent less harmful than combustible cigarettes because they contain no tar and significantly fewer chemicals that make up the toxic stew of smoke in combustible cigarettes.

    Evidence, carefully compiled, weighed and debated, is how the FDA reached its earlier decisions to provisionally authorize the sale of Swedish Match’s snus and Philip Morris International’s IQOS heat-not-burn sticks as modified-risk tobacco products (MRTPs), subject to regular review. And “evidence” is how it made its first decision to approve the marketing of Vuse.

    It reached its decision through dispassionate, rigorous diligence—a risk-proportionate, microscopic gauging of the potential harm e-cigarettes pose for young people versus their potential therapeutic uses for adults who smoke combustible cigarettes and would like a less damaging alternative. Indeed, the FDA’s approval process is so thorough, it is accepted as the international gold standard for vaccines, pharmaceuticals and medical devices. As Adam I. Muchmore, a Pennsylvania State University law professor, explained last month [August] in an interview with Newsweek about the wait for Covid-19 vaccine approval, “There are a lot of ‘i’s’ to be dotted and ‘t’s’ to be crossed, and these are not simple bureaucratic requirements. Both producing this data, and reviewing it, requires the work of multiple experts in a wide range of scientific fields.”

    We hope the FDA will continue to use scientific evidence to approve the sale of menthol-flavored e-cigarettes so that combustible menthol cigarette users, among them the majority of African-American smokers, also have the opportunity to reduce their health risk. And we hope it will consider that nicotine-replacement therapy gums and sprays are already marketed in menthol and other flavors, all to help smokers quit.

    One does not need to look far to see the effects of FDA decisions: Following its full approval last August of Pfizer-BioNTech’s Covid-19 vaccine, a “tidal wave” of people were expected to line up for their jabs, spurred by employers and businesses that have been waiting for the green light and at least some doubters who needed more reassurance it is safe.

    And the National Institutes of Health’s Anthony Fauci aptly summed up the FDA’s influence in a comment earlier this year about its approval for Aimmune Therapeutics’ Palforzia, the first drug to treat peanut allergy for children. “Science is showing us the path to a future in which new therapeutic options may provide both solutions as well as peace of mind that individuals with food allergies and their families deserve,” he said.

    Those words could well apply to the field of THR too, although the FDA’s policy of placing the onus solely on individual companies to prove they contribute to public health (to wit, the 2.3 million pages of evidence PMI submitted on behalf of its IQOS application) has already left some smaller, streamlined companies out in the cold.

    That said,  governments in lower and middle income countries (LMICs), where the vast majority of the world’s 1.14 billion smokers live, would do well to study all three of the FDA decisions regarding THR products as they work to strengthen their own national research and regulatory capabilities and to take note of the careful steps the agency continues to take as it examines the applications of other companies that manufacture e-cigarettes, including Juul.

    These governments and their public health authorities need to review the statistics from places such as the United Kingdom, which has supported e-cigarette use as an effective way to lessen health risks and even quit combustible smoking altogether. Or, conversely, they could take two minutes and 42 seconds to watch a graphic Public Health England demonstration of the viscous, oozing, sticky dark brown residue left in the lungs from the smoke from 16 packages of cigarettes over the period of one month compared to the barely discernible trace of vapor left by the equivalent number of e-cigarettes over the same period.

    Right now, a huge gap exists between research output in tobacco control by a few developed countries and LMICs, and when it comes to reduced-risk products, the gap is even greater, a reflection of both the lack of support for homegrown scientific research and a concomitant reliance on advanced industrialized countries for regulatory scientific advice and support. The Foundation is committed to playing its role in closing this gap to allow LMICs to have the scientists able to fully inform their policymakers about the potential benefits of THR.

    There appears to be no interest in tobacco harm reduction as a principle or a tendency to unquestioningly accept the warnings by bodies such as the World Health Organization, which itself is mired in a past overtaken by technological advancements and sounds like the proverbial Greek chorus as it points to the lack of long-term testing and the perils such products pose to youth.

    The most extreme example of this governmental attitude is in India, where, despite 1.3 million people dying each year from tobacco-related diseases, e-cigarettes were banned in haste by the government, which was urged to do so by The Union, a Bloomberg-funded NGO based in Paris that recommends such extreme measures for LMICs on the supposed grounds that youth in these countries are particularly vulnerable. In turn, this has led to a burgeoning black market that prices these products out of reach of many of the disadvantaged communities who could use them most.

    The fact is, the most favored tobacco control measure in India is tax increases, which only serves to exacerbate the difference between the rich and the poor, for the latter group must turn to cheaper, even more dangerous products such as bidis, thin cigarettes composed of unprocessed tobacco that are hand-rolled in leaves and contain higher concentrations of nicotine, tar and carbon monoxide than conventional cigarettes sold in the United States.

    In Indonesia, where more than a quarter of the population smokes, including 19.4 percent of young people between the ages of 13 to 15, the local—and significantly cheaper—cigarette of choice is the unfiltered kretek, made from a blend of tobacco, cloves and other additives. Yet, there is little government oversight, with children even exposed to lengthy tobacco advertisements before blockbuster Hollywood films.

    Still, the WHO refuses to apply the consequences of harm reduction always being part of the definition of tobacco control in the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. A good start would be for the WHO to consider recent peer-reviewed research by leading scientists that underpins the FDA submission and not reject it simply because it has been funded by the tobacco industry. In its Report on the Global Tobacco Epidemic—2021, it does not waver from its position, stating that new and emerging products simply chart a “new threat to tobacco control.”

    “As they emerge and rapidly evolve, these products can be difficult to characterize and therefore bring with them many regulatory challenges,” it states. “At the same time, the tobacco and related industries behind these newer products pedal misinformation campaigns, marketing them as ‘clean,’ ‘smoke-free’ or ‘safer,’ and claim they are effective cessation aids. By doing so, these industries attempt to appear part of the solution to the tobacco epidemic as opposed to instigators and perpetrators of the epidemic.”

    How disheartening! Yes, the tobacco industry has acted unconscionably in the past, lying about the toxicity of cigarettes and shamelessly professing its primordial dedication to the health and welfare of smokers. But, to paraphrase the old saying, change—real change—starts from within. We are seeing signs of that in the tobacco industry, with the results recognized by the FDA, leading health experts and authorities in countries such as the U.K.  

    It is time for all of us to move on—together.

    To stop treating all nicotine products as the same.

    To acknowledge that we all have a stake in people’s health and well-being and in a healthy future for our children, their children and for generations to come.

    And to start saving up to 4 million lives a year in the interim as the battle—our battle—continues to eradicate combustible tobacco for good.

  • ‘African Americans Bear Brunt of Menthol’

    ‘African Americans Bear Brunt of Menthol’

    Photo: New Africa

    African Americans represent 12 percent of the U.S. population but carried 41 percent of all menthol smoking-related premature deaths in the United States between 1980 and 2018, according to a new study researchers believe is the first to quantify the impact menthol cigarettes have had in Black communities across the country.

    “It is well known that tobacco companies, in the 1960s and 1970s, targeted menthol cigarettes to African American communities, and menthol cigarettes became ubiquitous in those communities,” said David Mendez, lead author of the study and an associate professor in the Department of Health Management and Policy at the University of Michigan School of Public Health.

    Menthol cigarettes were responsible for 1.5 million new smokers, 157,000 smoking-related premature deaths and 1.5 million life-years lost among African Americans between 1980 and 2018, according to the study. Relative to the general population, these figures represent, respectively, 15 percent, 41 percent and 50 percent of the total damage caused by menthol cigarettes during that period, despite African Americans constituting only 12 percent of the total U.S. population.

    For their analysis, published in Tobacco Control, researchers utilized a simulation model they had developed for a population-wide study published earlier this year. They also used data from the National Health Interview Survey to feed the model with information specific to the African American community.

    “Half of the life-years lost during this period due to menthol smoking occurred among African Americans, and our study results are likely to be conservative,” said study co-author Thuy Le. “Menthol cigarettes are an important contributor to health disparities in this country, and removing menthol cigarettes from the market will save thousands of lives, particularly among African Americans.”

  • BAT to Pull Out of Myanmar

    BAT to Pull Out of Myanmar

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    British American Tobacco will withdraw from Myanmar by the end of this year, reports The Daily Star.

    Responding to a query from Reuters about the status of its operations in the Southeast Asian country, the company said the decision was taken having assessed the long-term viability of its Myanmar business.

    “Like any global company, we continuously evaluate our operations around the world,” the company said.

    “Having evaluated the long-term operational and commercial viability of our business in Myanmar, we have taken the decision to withdraw from the country and cease all operations.”

    BAT did not provide a specific reason for its decision.

    Other Western companies have left Myanmar in the wake of February’s coup, which has left the nation in turmoil. The country’s economy is now in dire straits, with the kyat currency losing more than 60 percent of its value last month, pushing up food and fuel costs. The World Bank has forecast an 18 percent contraction in gross domestic product this year.

    BAT started operating in Myanmar in 2013, two years after a quasi-civilian government embarked on sweeping reforms to lure investors.