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Tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines and Areca-derived N-nitrosamines : chemistry, biochemistry, carcinogenicity, and relevance to humans

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TLDR
Evidence is presented that strongly supports the concept that TSNA contribute to the increased risk for cancer of the upper digestive tract in tobacco chewers and for the increase risk of lung cancer, especially pulmonary adenocarcinoma, in smokers.
Abstract
Nicotine and the minor tobacco alkaloids give rise to tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines (TSNA) during tobacco processing and during smoking. Chemical-analytical studies led to the identification of seven TSNA in smokeless tobacco (< or = 25 micrograms/g) and in mainstream smoke of cigarettes (1.3 micrograms TSNA/cigarette). Indoor air polluted by tobacco smoke may contain up to 24 pg/L of TSNA. In mice, rats, and hamsters, three TSNA, N'-nitrosonornicotine (NNN), 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), and 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL), are powerful carcinogens; two TSNA are moderately active as carcinogens; and two TSNA appear not to be carcinogenic. The TSNA are procarcinogens, agents that require metabolic activation. The active forms of the carcinogenic TSNA react with cellular components, including DNA, and with hemoglobin (Hb). The Hb adducts in chewers and smokers serve as biomarkers for the uptake and metabolic activation of carcinogenic TSNA and the urinary excretion of NNAL as free alcohol and as glucuronide for the uptake of TSNA. The review presents evidence that strongly supports the concept that TSNA contribute to the increased risk for cancer of the upper digestive tract in tobacco chewers and for the increased risk of lung cancer, especially pulmonary adenocarcinoma, in smokers. The high incidence of cancer of the upper digestive tract especially among men on the Indian subcontinent has been causally associated with chewing of betel quid mixed with tobacco. In addition to the TSNA, the betel quid chewers are exposed to four N-nitrosamines that are formed during chewing from the Areca alkaloids, two of these N-nitrosamines are carcinogens. The article also reviews approaches toward the reduction of the carcinogenic potency of smokeless tobacco, betel quid-tobacco mixtures, and cigarette smoke. Although the safest way to reduce the risk for tobacco-related cancers is to refrain from chewing and smoking, modifications of smokeless tobacco and of cigarettes are indicated to lead to less toxic products. Another more recent approach for reducing the carcinogenic effect of tobacco products is the application of chemopreventive agents, primarily of micronutrients. Future aspects in tobacco carcinogenesis, especially as it relates to TSNA, are expected in the field of molecular biochemistry and in biomarker studies, with the goal of identifying those tobacco and betel quid chewers and tobacco smokers who are at especially high risk for cancer.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Biomonitoring exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS): A critical reappraisal

TL;DR: Comparison with cotinine concentrations in cigarette smokers reveals that passive smokers take up less than 1/100 of the nicotine dose of smokers, and avail able data suggest that passive smoking is associated with a small induction of placental AHH and also with effects on cardiovascular risk markers.
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Impact of Filter Cigarette Smoking on Lung Cancer Histology

TL;DR: The predominance of AC over SCC may be due in part to the fact that smokers of very low yield cigarettes tend to compensate for the lower nicotine levels by inhaling more deeply and frequently, leading to greater exposure of the peripheral lung to the carcinogens in tobacco smoke.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strain as a determinant factor in the differential responsiveness of rats to chemicals.

TL;DR: There are differences in the responsiveness of rat strains to chemicals and that the susceptibility observed is dependent on the tissue examined, which indicates that the genotype differs among strains, and this may be responsible for differences in sensitivities to chemicals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrate in Drinking Water and Risk of Death from Bladder Cancer: An Ecological Case-Control Study in Taiwan

TL;DR: The results of the present study show that there was a significant positive relationship between the levels of nitrate in drinking water and risk of death from bladder cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic polymorphism of CYP2D6 and lung cancer risk in African-Americans and Caucasians in Los Angeles County

TL;DR: The data suggest that the CYP2D6 genetic polymorphism is not the strong risk factor for lung cancer suggested by some studies of phenotype, but may play a minor role.
References
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Journal Article

Smoking and Drinking in Relation to Oral and Pharyngeal Cancer

TL;DR: Risks of oropharyngeal cancer tended to combine more in a multiplicative than additive fashion and were increased more than 35-fold among those who consumed two or more packs of cigarettes and more than four alcoholic drinks/day.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Evidence connecting smoking with disease smoking habits and total mortality diseases causing excess mortality of cigarette smokers cigarette smoking as a cause of excess mortality specific diseases related to cigarette smoking approaches to prevention and experience in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Production of Malignant Primary Hepatic Tumours in the Rat by Feeding Dimethylnitrosamine

TL;DR: ImagesFigs.
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