Category: Featured

  • FDA Commissioner Laments Lawsuits

    FDA Commissioner Laments Lawsuits

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Robert Califf has lamented the FDA’s ongoing tobacco industry litigation following the agency’s attempt to regulate e-cigarettes, according to Politico. The FDA is facing over 40 lawsuits from companies whose premarket tobacco product applications have been denied.

    “We are in a legal battle every single day, and it’s draining on the agency,” Califf said at the annual public meeting of the Reagan-Udall Foundation. “It has a big impact and a much bigger impact than I thought.”

    “None of us expected 27 million applications for vaping,” he said.

    Califf also noted that enforcement is difficult when it comes to illegal product. “I find myself in the midst of really an epic struggle … when I think of how to enforce when you have an industry that is amazingly creative.”

    Califf hinted that the FDA would meet with the Department of Justice soon to discuss enforcement but declined to say more: “Stay tuned on that one.”

  • Filtrona Launches Plastic-Free Filter

    Filtrona Launches Plastic-Free Filter

    Image: Filtrona

    Filtrona launched its latest plastic-free innovation, ECO Tube Triple Carbon Filter, at TabExpo in Bologna May 10-11, 2023.

    According to Filtrona, the ECO Tube Triple Carbon is a patent-pending sustainable plastic-free filter design that offers similar nicotine delivery to current filters, with a unique end visual and clean post-smoking.

    The ECO Tube Triple Carbon Filter meets EU Single Use Plastics Directive requirements, is biodegradable and, based on internal studies, degrades more rapidly than filters constructed with cellulose acetate, attaining 90 percent biodegradation in 90 days. With a similar nicotine delivery as the acetate version of Tube Triple Carbon, its carbon loading capability is up to four times higher compared to existing impregnated carbon paper, according to Filtrona.

    ECO Tube Triple Carbon Filter offers cigarette manufacturers an extensive array of customizable designs in various lengths, circumferences, pressure drops, carbon types, carbon sizes and configurations for ECO Tube combined segments, with each construction designed to enhance a particular brand and suit customer taste and filtration requirements.

    “With sustainability at the heart of our business, we are committed to developing more renewable, degradable and sustainable products,” said Filtrona CEO Robert Pye.

    The Bologna event was the first TabExpo show for the newly rebranded Filtrona, which adopted its former name earlier this year. Tobacco Reporter published an in-depth report about Filtrona’s rebranding in its March 2023 issue.

  • Fiji Tobacco Farming Increasing

    Fiji Tobacco Farming Increasing

    Mangrove plantation in Fiji
    Image: Chelsea | Adobe Stock

    Tobacco farming in Fiji is increasing, according to FBC News.

    With tobacco cultivation taking only three months in Fiji, many farmers are turning to the crop as an easier, faster agricultural endeavor. BAT offers support for tobacco farming in the area as well.

    “Before, it’s really doing cash crop from the farm and then load it and take it to the market and sell, but this one, it’s different; the market is there,” said one farmer.

    Tobacco farming is significantly easier than traditional sugar cane farming, according to another farmer. “Sugar cane farming is very hard. This one [tobacco] is only 3 [months to] 4 months, 4 months finished, which is a good, big amount.”

    BAT offers access to quality seeds and modern farming techniques as well as training programs and knowledge-sharing initiatives. BAT employs more than 300 farmers across Fiji.

  • New Company Offers Tobacco-Free Nicotine Products

    New Company Offers Tobacco-Free Nicotine Products

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    The Public Investment Fund (PIF) has launched Badael, a new company offering tobacco-free nicotine products, reports the Saudi Gazette. Badael will offer its products across Saudi Arabia by the end of 2023 with an aim to expand regionally and internationally in the long term.

    The PIF announced the establishment of Badael in the run-up to the World Health Organization’s World No Tobacco Day. The company aims to develop, manufacture and distribute innovative products targeted to reduce smoking prevalence and promote healthier lifestyles by offering tobacco-free and less harmful alternatives.

    Badael will also aim to deliver on the PIF’s localization mandate by supporting domestic manufacturing, sourcing raw materials, knowledge transfer and development of intellectual property.

    The company’s products will be manufactured in Saudi Arabia. Badael aims to provide new economic opportunities and create jobs in the area.

  • Vietnam Harm Prevention Approved

    Vietnam Harm Prevention Approved

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Vietnam has approved the National Strategy on Tobacco Harm Prevention and Control to 2030, reports Vietnam+.

    The strategy aims to reduce the rate of male tobacco use to less than 39 percent between 2023 and 2025 and to reduce the rate of female tobacco use to below 1.4 percent.

    It also aims to reduce passive smoking to less than 30 percent at work, less than 75 percent at restaurants, less than 80 percent at bars and cafes and less than 60 percent at hotels.

    A road map will be created to increase taxes on tobacco products, regulate the minimum selling price of tobacco products and research and evaluate the effectiveness of the plan for calculating taxes on tobacco products on the retail price in order to achieve a reduced rate of tobacco use.

    The strategy also proposes promulgate regulations on the prevention of e-cigarette products, heated-tobacco, shisha and other new tobacco products and the sale of tobacco for juveniles or juveniles selling tobacco under the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.

    Vietnam remains one of the 15 countries with the highest smoking rate among male adults.

  • Cyprus Minors Have Access to Nicotine-Free Cigs

    Cyprus Minors Have Access to Nicotine-Free Cigs

    Image: Vlad | Adobe Stock

    Minors in Cyprus have access to nicotine-free cigarettes due to ambiguity in the 2017 tobacco control legislation, reports In-Cyprus.

    Nicotine-free products are easily accessible, on kiosk stalls next to cash registers and separate from other tobacco products as well as in cafes. The products have attractive packaging and are available in a variety of fruit flavors.

    Over a year ago, the Cyprus Addiction Prevention Authority wrote to the Legal Service requesting an opinion on the nicotine-free tobacco products but did not receive a reply.

    According to the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs, 16-year-old students in Cyprus reduced conventional cigarette use and switched to new tobacco products like hookah and e-cigarettes in 2019. Daily use of e-cigarettes by students in Cyprus is 4.6 percent compared to the average of 3.1 percent.

  • Clinical Data on Vuse Illustrates Beneficial Public Health Impact

    Clinical Data on Vuse Illustrates Beneficial Public Health Impact

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    New results from one of the largest ever vapor product studies, which analyzed BAT’s flagship vapor brand Vuse, have been published in the journal of Internal and Emergency Medicine, reports BAT.

    The study compared clinical measurements from exclusive Vuse consumers with smokers. The results of the study show that participating Vuse consumers had favorable differences in biomarkers of exposure and biomarkers of potential harm relevant to smoking-related diseases when compared to smokers. 

    Vuse users have shown significantly lower biomarkers of exposure for priority cigarette smoke toxicants as defined by the World Health Organization. The data also showed favorable differences between Vuse consumers and smokers across all biomarkers of potential harm measured, with three being statistically significant.

    James Murphy, director of research and science at BAT, said, “Vaping continues to grow in importance as adult smokers seek reduced-risk alternative nicotine products. That is why these results are so important for Vuse, BAT and consumers, as they allow us to better understand the positive real-world impact of vaping compared to smoking. The research shows a clear difference between those using Vuse compared to smokers and reinforces the reduced-risk potential and role of vapor in tobacco harm reduction.”

    In an opinion piece published by Tobacco Reporter, Murphy elaborated on the significance of the study to tobacco harm reduction.  

  • New Zealanders Want to Ban Vaping

    New Zealanders Want to Ban Vaping

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    More than two-thirds of New Zealanders want to ban vaping following Australia’s new legislation making vapes prescription only, according to the NZ Herald.

    A poll asking, “Should we ban recreational vaping?” showed 68 percent of respondents agreeing while 27 percent disagreed.

    Pediatrician Colette Muir stated that the Pediatric Society of New Zealand was “extremely worried” by the level of youth vaping in the country. “While the health policy intention regarding vaping was to reduce smoking, it is now clear that vaping is causing significant harm to Aotearoa’s tamariki and rangitahi,” said Muir, referring to children and their families. “More needs to be done to prevent youth who do not smoke taking up vaping in the first place.”

    “We are concerned that an alarming number of high school students are trying or taking up vaping because their friends do it and they’ve heard it’s safe and are curious,” said Muir. “While the Vaping Amendment Act, which came into force in November 2022, aims to make e-cigarettes less appealing and available to teens, we feel more needs to be done to prevent youth taking up e-cigarettes, particularly e-cigarettes that contain nicotine.”

    Health Minister Ayesha Verrall said vaping is important to help smokers quit, but the balance needs to be right to make sure youth don’t take up the habit. “We haven’t got that balance right at the moment,” Verrall said.

    National’s Christopher Luxon stated he was open to “all things,” including a ban. “I really think we’ve got our vape settings wrong here in New Zealand. I would really like us to take a step back and really look at them closely.

    “It’s impacting our young people. Originally, they were introduced so that it actually could help people come off smoking, but it’s actually created a whole class and a new sector of addiction for people,” he said.

  • Vaping to be Banned for Those Under 18

    Vaping to be Banned for Those Under 18

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Ireland will ban vaping for those under the age of 18, effective July, reports the Irish Times.

    Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly will bring a memo to the Cabinet this week outlining the full legislation. The new law is expected to be enacted before the lower house of Parliament’s summer recess in mid-July.

    The legislation includes restrictions on the types of retailers allowed to sell vapes or nicotine-inhaling products as well as measures to curb advertising of nicotine-inhaling products near schools and other locations frequented by kids and young adults.

    Donnelly is expected to tell the Cabinet that there is “clear evidence” that nicotine exposure in young people has long-term effects on brain development, referencing recently published surveys of Irish school-aged kids. The surveys, including the Health Behaviour in School-Aged Children survey from 2018 and the European Schools Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs survey from 2019, showed that 9 percent of 12-year-olds to 17-year-olds and 15.5 percent of 15-year-olds and 16-year-olds used electronic cigarettes in the past 30 days. Donnelly is also expected to reference a Health Research Board review that found that kids who vaped were five times more likely to begin smoking.

    The government is expected to prioritize passage of the bill through the Oireachtas to allow for full debate and discussion before sending the legislation to President Michael D. Higgins for his signature.

  • A Ban By Any Other Name

    A Ban By Any Other Name

    Photo: kurgu128

    The FDA’s reluctance to permit flavored e-cigarettes may be hindering adult smokers’ conversions to less harmful products.

    By Neil McKeganey and Andrea Patton

    If there is one phrase that must keep e-cigarette and e-liquid company executives awake at night, it must surely be “flavor ban.” In their public statements, U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials have always denied pursuing a ban on e-liquid flavors, encouraging e-cigarette manufactures instead to “show us the data” where e-cigarette flavors are compared to tobacco flavor in terms of their effectiveness in assisting adult smokers in quitting. 

    The reality of the premarket tobacco application process, however, tells a rather different story. Of the more than 6.7 million applications submitted—over 99 percent of which the FDA has adjudicated upon—not a single flavor other than tobacco has been awarded a marketing authorization. On the basis of those numbers, whether admitted or not, there is an e-cigarette flavor ban in the U.S. in all but name.

    But why have flavors drawn such restrictive regulatory action from the FDA? The answer, of course, lies in youth vaping. So great has been the concern at the increase in youth vaping that politicians, public health officials, the media, parents and others have found themselves asking the questions “why are so many kids vaping, and how can we stop it?” When Scott Gottlieb was the director of the FDA, he offered an answer to that question in railing against “kid-appealing flavors.” In the years following Gottlieb’s tenure, it seems the phrase “kid appealing” has been dropped in reference to characterizing flavors per se as the villain of the piece when it comes to youth vaping.

    But how can we be sure that it is indeed e-liquid flavors that are driving youth vaping? A surprising answer to that question can be found in the latest results from the 2022 National Youth Tobacco Survey. This survey draws upon data from over 28,000 middle school and high school pupils from across the U.S. and is one of the leading influences on government policy when it comes to e-cigarettes.

    When youth who had ever tried an e-cigarette were questioned about the reasons why they first used an e-cigarette, flavors were the ninth most frequently cited reason among middle school pupils and the seventh most frequently cited reason among high school pupils. In explaining their reasons for starting to vape, both middle school and high school pupils much more commonly mentioned curiosity about e-cigarettes, the fact that e-cigarettes were being used by friends or family members, or that they felt anxious, stressed or depressed.

    A very similar picture emerged in relation to the reasons youth participants in the survey offered for why they were currently using e-cigarettes. In this case, flavors were the ninth most frequently cited reason among middle school pupils and seventh among high school pupils. Again, much more influential in explaining their current e-cigarette use were the fact that these devices were seen to be a way of reducing stress, the fact that they were used by friends and the attraction of the nicotine buzz. Flavors may be part of the choices that youth make when they are using an e-cigarettes, but that does not mean that they are the key factor in the reason why youth start vaping or continue vaping.

    On the basis of those results, one would have to say that flavors may well have been miscast as the cause of youth vaping. There is, however, a further problem with restrictive regulatory action targeted on flavors apart from the fact that it may well not be flavors that are driving youth vaping—the fact that flavors might actually be an important part of adult smokers’ journeys away from combustibles. By reducing the range of tobacco flavors adult smokers can use in their e-cigarettes, regulators may be weakening the capacity of these devices to assist adult smokers in quitting. 

    With an e-cigarette flavor ban in all but name being applied in the U.S., it is important that e-cigarette companies, and others, monitor the extent to which the reduced range of available flavors may be resulting in fewer adult smokers using e-cigarettes and fewer smokers managing to quit smoking with these products. It is important to remember that the ratchet of restrictive regulatory prohibition can move both up and down depending upon the evidence. If evidence shows that flavors are not driving youth vaping and that those flavors are helping adult smokers to quit, then a case can be made for allowing flavors to reenter the world of adult vaping. In the meantime, attention needs to be focused on how manufacturers and others can work together to ensure that flavored e-cigarettes, while available for adult use, are inaccessible to youth.