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Showing papers by "Dietrich Hoffmann published in 1987"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although the exposure of the smoker to mainstream smoke components is decreased due to proportionally greater consumption of low and ultra-low yield cigarettes, and lower rates of consumption of cigarettes with high smoke yields, the carcinogenic potential of indoor pollutants originating from tobacco products is not diminished.
Abstract: The mainstream and sidestream smoke of four types of popular US cigarettes were analyzed for toxic and carcinogenic agents. The cigarettes included one without a filter tip, and one filter cigarette each with medium, low and ultra-low smoke yields. The analyses clearly demonstrated that 12 toxic agents determined in this study were significantly reduced in the mainstream smoke of filter cigarettes, as compared with smoke yields from the nonfilter cigarette. In the case of the ultra-low yield cigarette, mainstream smoke emissions were reduced by about 90%. In contrast to this finding, the emissions of the same toxic and carcinogenic components into sidestream smoke of the filter cigarettes were not greatly reduced. Sidestream smoke is the major contributor to environmental tobacco smoke, to which both smokers and non-smokers are exposed. Although the exposure of the smoker to mainstream smoke components is decreased due to proportionally greater consumption of low and ultra-low yield cigarettes, and lower rates of consumption of cigarettes with high smoke yields, the carcinogenic potential of indoor pollutants originating from tobacco products is not diminished.

157 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: The measurement of cotinine in cervical flushes by radioimmunoassay proved to be highly accurate in distinguishing smokers from nonsmokers, achieving 100% sensitivity and 97% specificity.
Abstract: In preparation for an epidemiological investigation of cigarette smoking and cervical neoplasia, we studied methods of measuring cervical exposure to tobacco smoke. The measurement of cotinine in cervical flushes by radioimmunoassay proved to be highly accurate in distinguishing smokers from nonsmokers, achieving 100% sensitivity and 97% specificity. In most subjects, quantitative levels of cervical cotinine and nicotine mirrored recent smoking intensity. Some of the apparent exceptions may have resulted from metabolic/secretory traits of the subjects. If so, the biochemical measurement of smoke constituents in the cervix might prove more valuable for epidemiological studies of cervical neoplasia than data on current smoking behavior collected by interview.

116 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the concentrations of several toxic and carcinogenic agents in the three most popular dry snuff brands have been compared with those in the five most popular moist snuff flavors sold in the United States.
Abstract: The oral use of snuff is causatively associated with cancer of the oral cavity. Since most epidemiologic studies to date relate to the long-term use of dry snuff, which has dominated the U.S. smokeless tobacco market in the past, the concentrations of several toxic and carcinogenic agents in the three most popular dry snuff brands have been compared with those in the five most popular moist snuff brands sold in the United States. All eight samples were analyzed for nitrate, alkaloids, polyphenols, volatile carbonyl compounds, lead, cadmium, selenium, and the carcinogenic compounds benzo[a]pyrene (CAS: 50-32-8), polonium-210 (CAS: 13981-52-7), volatile N-nitrosamines (VNAs), N-nitrosodiethanolamine (CAS: 1116-54-7), and the tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines (TSNAs). Most of the snuff brands were rich in nitrate (greater than or equal to 1.5%), total polyphenols (greater than 2%), and in nicotine (greater than or equal to 1.5%), which is the habituating factor in tobacco use. Concentrations of the VNAs were significantly above the permissible limits set for some food products; the concentrations of the TSNAs in both snuff types exceeded the levels of nitrosamines in other consumer products by at least two to three orders of magnitude. The extremely high levels of the TSNAs in snuff have remained unchanged during the last decade and present the major carcinogenic risk factor for the oral use of snuff. Polonium-210 contributes further to the carcinogenic risk associated with snuff. The chemical-analytical data presented in this study do not indicate marked differences in the carcinogenic potential of moist snuff compared to dry snuff.

89 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that MNPN is present in the saliva of betel quid chewers and is a potent carcinogen in F344 rats.
Abstract: 3-(Methylnitrosamino)propionitrile (MNPN), a potent carcinogen in F344 rats, was detected for the first time in the saliva of betel quid chewers at levels ranging from 0.5 to 11.4 micrograms/liter. The tumorigenic properties of MNPN and its potential to methylate DNA in F344 rats were evaluated. Groups of 21 male and 21 female rats were given 60 s.c. injections over a 20-week period (total doses 0.055 and 0.23 mmol per rat). The experiment was terminated after 106 weeks. MNPN at the higher dose induced 18 (86%) malignant tumors of the nasal cavity in male and 15 (71%) in female rats. The lower dose induced nine (43%) liver tumors. Groups of four or five male F344 rats were treated with a single s.c. or i.v. injection of MNPN (0.4 mmol/kg). MNPN was also administered to rats by swabbing the oral cavity (2.21 mmol/kg). The levels of 7-methylguanine and O6-methylguanine, formed 0.5-36 h after treatment, were measured in the liver, nasal mucosa, esophagus, and oral issues. The highest levels of methylated guanines were detected in the nasal cavity independent of the route of administration. The results of this study demonstrate that MNPN is present in the saliva of betel quid chewers and is a potent carcinogen in F344 rats.

79 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new tobacco-specific N-nitrosamine, 4-(methylnitrosamino)-4-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (iso-NNAL) was isolated from snuff tobacco; its tumorigenic properties are currently being tested in mice and rats.
Abstract: A new tobacco-specific N-nitrosamine, 4-(methylnitrosamino)-4-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (iso-NNAL) was isolated from snuff tobacco. Structural characterization of this N-nitrosamine was confirmed by mass spectral analysis. Five popular US brands of moist snuff and three popular US brands of dry snuff tobacco were analyzed for moisture, nicotine and tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines. The moisture content varied from 20 to 53% in moist snuff and from 4.7 to 5.6% in dry snuff. The nicotine levels in these samples varied from 0.6 to 3.2%. The newly identified iso-NNAL was present in concentrations ranging from 0.07 to 2.5 p.p.m. whereas other tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines, N-nitrosonornicotine, N-nitrosoanatabine, N-nitrosoanabasine and 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone were found to range from 0.1 to 178 p.p.m. Iso-NNAL was not detected in mainstream and sidestream smoke of cigarettes. Iso-NNAL is genotoxic in primary rat hepatocytes; its tumorigenic properties are currently being tested in mice and rats.

33 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: On-going studies are now exploring the determination of the two highly carcinogenic nicotine-derived nitrosamines N'-nitrosonornicotine (NNN) and 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), respectively of their metabolites, in physiological fluids of smokers and nonsmokers.

22 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Pretreatment of the rats with nicotine had no significant effect on the methylation of DNA by NNK nor on the elimination constants of NNK and its major metabolite 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridly)-1-butanol.
Abstract: In this study we assayed the effects of snuff and nicotine on the DNA methylation by 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a powerful tobacco-specific N-nitrosamine. Male F344 rats were pretreated for 2 weeks with either a solution of a snuff extract or 0.002% nicotine in the drinking water. Subsequently, the rats were given a single dose of NNK and the effects of snuff and nicotine on the methylation of guanine by NNK in the DNA of target organs of this carcinogenic nitrosamine were determined. Formation of 7-methylguanine in the liver, nasal mucosae and oral cavity and of O6-methylguanine in the liver and oral cavity was much lower in the rats pretreated with snuff extract than in those not pretreated. On the other hand, pretreatment of the rats with nicotine had no significant effect on the methylation of DNA by NNK nor on the elimination constants of NNK and its major metabolite 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridly)-1-butanol.

14 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effectiveness of filter tips for reducing cadmium, tar, nicotine, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide in cigarettes was studied and it is indicated that the filter tip has influenced the combustion of the tobacco column during smoking.
Abstract: The effectiveness of filter tips for reducing cadmium, tar, nicotine, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide in cigarettes was studied. The cigarettes were made from tobacco grown on municipal sewage sludge-amended soil and were therefore high in cadmium. When machine-smoked, filter tips did not result in a significant reduction of cadmium deposited on Cambridge filters. This may indicate that a considerable fraction of cadmium is present in the vapor phase of the smoke and therefore not reduced to the same extent as the tar by certain filters. Nicotine and carbon monoxide were reduced to a lesser extent than tar. This indicates that the filter tip has influenced the combustion of the tobacco column during smoking.

13 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: After oral swabbing with a mixture of NNN and NNK, rats developed tumours of the oral cavity and lung, showing that these TSNA are not only organ-specific carcinogens but can also induce local tumours.
Abstract: Dry snuff contains high levels of tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines (TSNA); their concentrations exceed by more than 100 times the quantities of nitrosamines found in any other consumer product. The concentrations of TSNA are similar in dry snuff and in the more popular moist snuff. In addition to the four TSNA identified earlier [N'-nitrosonornicotine (NNN), 4-(N-nitrosomethylamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), N'-nitrosoanatabine (NAT) and N'-nitrosoanabasine (NAB)], two new nitrosamines were detected in snuff, namely 4-(N-nitrosomethylamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAl; 0.07-0.15 ppm) and 4-(N-nitrosomethylamino)-4-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (iso-NNAl; 0.06-1.1 ppm). After oral swabbing with a mixture of NNN and NNK, rats developed tumours of the oral cavity and lung, showing that these TSNA are not only organ-specific carcinogens but can also induce local tumours. After swabbing an extract of snuff containing the same concentrations of NNN and NNK, significantly fewer tumours were induced in the oral cavity and lung, indicating inhibition of the tumorigenic activity of the TSNA by other snuff constituents.

11 citations


Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: The association of tobacco usage and cancer has been known for more than five decades, but the evidence from case-control studies in the UK and the USA directed attention towards the association of cigarette smoking with lung cancer in 1950, and it has been concluded that oral use of snuff is carcinogenic to humans.
Abstract: The association of tobacco usage and cancer has been known for more than five decades. Clinical observations by F.H.Mueller in Cologne in 1939 and by Schairer and Schoeniger in Jena in 1943 were among the first reports to indicate an increased risk for lung cancer among smokers. However, it was not until 1950 that the evidence from case-control studies in the UK and the USA directed attention towards the association of cigarette smoking with lung cancer (Doll and Hill 1950; Levin et al. 1950; Wynder and Graham 1950). In the following 35 years, more than 100 epidemiological reports from at least 15 countries have formed the basis for the conclusions of the US Surgeon General (1982), the Royal College of Physicians (1983), and the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC 1986) that cigarette smoking is causally associated with cancer of the lung, larynx, oral cavity, and esophagus, and correlated with cancer of the pancreas, kidney, and urinary bladder, and, possibly also with cancer of the cervix. Cigar and pipe smoking are also causally associated with cancer of the lung, larynx, oral cavity, and esophagus, although the association of these tobacco habits with cancer of the lung and of the larynx is less strong than that of cigarette smoking. Passive smoking gives rise to some risk of cancer (IARC 1986). It has also been concluded that oral use of snuff is carcinogenic to humans (IARC 1985;US Surgeon General 1986).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Monthly measurements of COHb, nicotine and cotinine indicate that the SS-exposed animals are absorbing slightly higher amounts of these smoke constituents than the MS-exp exposed hamsters.

Journal Article
TL;DR: Higher levels of N7-methylguanine and 7-meG were detected in the nasal mucosa and lesser DNA methylation in the liver and oesophagus, independent of the mode of administration, which correlates with the results of the study of the tumorigenic properties of NMAP in rats.
Abstract: N-(Nitrosomethylamino)propionitrile (NMAP) was isolated and identified in the saliva of betel-quid chewers in amounts ranging from 0.5 to 11.4 micrograms/l. Groups of 21 male and 21 female rats were given 60 subcutaneous injections of NMAP over a 20-week period (total doses, 0.055 and 0.23 mmol/rat). After 106 weeks, the higher dose had induced 18 (86%) malignant tumours of the nasal cavity in male and 15 (71%) in female rats. Nine (43%) liver tumours were observed among animals treated with the lower dose. Fischer 344 rats were treated with a single dose of NMAP (intravenously or subcutaneously, 0.4 mmol/kg; or by swabbing the oral cavity, 2.21 mmol/kg), and the levels of N7-methylguanine (7-meG) and O6-methylguanine (O6-meG) were measured in DNA isolated from oesophagus and nasal mucosa, which are target organs, and from liver which is not. Higher levels of O6-meG and 7-meG were detected in the nasal mucosa and lesser DNA methylation in the liver and oesophagus, independent of the mode of administration. This correlates with the results of the study of the tumorigenic properties of NMAP in rats.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Selenium concentration was found to be the same in the gaseous phase of both MS and SS smoke, but its concentration was significantly higher in the particulate matter of the MS smoke.
Abstract: The quantities of selenium, tar and nicotine present in mainstream (MS) and sidestream (SS) smoke of machine-smoked cigarettes was studied. The cigarettes were prepared from tobacco purposely cultured on fly ash-amended soil so as to increase its selenium concentration. Selenium concentration was found to be the same in the gaseous phase of both MS and SS smoke, but its concentration was significantly higher (p < 0.05) in the particulate matter of the MS smoke. Tar was higher in MS smoke and nicotine in SS smoke. Factors affecting selenium concentrations in tobacco and its possible environmental significance are discussed.