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Title: TOXICOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF TOBACCO INGREDIENTS


1
  • TOXICOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF TOBACCO INGREDIENTS
  • Richard R. Baker
  • British American Tobacco
  • Southampton
  • UK
  • LSRO Meeting, Denver, CO, USA
  • 8/9 June 2004

2
PLAN OF PRESENTATION
  • General aspects, definitions etc.
  • Briefly review past work
  • Overview of BAT work
  • Bioassays
  • Pyrolysis
  • Smoke chemistry

3
  • SOME DEFINITIONS (a)
  • Tobacco constituent
  • A substance naturally present in tobacco
  • Tobacco ingredient
  • A substance, generally a flavor material, added
    to tobacco during the cigarette manufacturing
    process

4
  • SOME DEFINITIONS (b)
  • FLAVORS
  • Impart a specific taste, flavor or aroma
  • Casings - applied to pre-cut tobacco (few )
  • - often recognised foodstuffs
  • Flavorings (top flavors)
  • - applied to cut and processed
    tobacco (ppm levels, several flavors
    in mixture)

5
  • SOME DEFINITIONS (c)
  • ADDITIVES
  • Used for a specific technological purpose, e.g.
  • Humectants increase tobacco moisture-holding
    capacity
  • Preservatives protect product deteriation from
    microorganisms
  • Binders and strengtheners maintain physical
    state of product
  • Fillers contribute to volume without
    contributing to odor, taste or flavor

6
TYPICAL CIGARETTE TOBACCO BLENDS
COMPONENT USA () UK ()
Virginia lamina (flue-cured) 35 75
Burley lamina (air-cured) 26
Oriental lamina (sun-cured) 11
Stem 22
Reconstituted tobacco 25 3
Casings, humectants 2.5
Flavorings 0.5
TOTAL 100 100
7
  • Potentially, ingredients can
  • Distil into smoke
  • Decompose/oxidise and products enter smoke
  • Reaction products react with smoke constituents
    and affect their yields and generate other smoke
    products

8
GENERAL ASSUMPTIONS BY HEALTH AUTHORITIES
  • Flavor ingredients increase the toxicity of smoke
  • Low tar cigarettes have higher levels of flavor
    ingredients than higher yield cigarettes

9
US Surgeon Generals Report, 1979
  • In a section discussing technical achievements
    to develop low tar cigarettes, stated
  • All of these developments have led to increased
    use of flavor additives, especially for low-tar,
    low-nicotine cigarettes. In fact, these new
    cigarettes require flavor corrections by
    additives in order to be acceptable to the
    consumer.

10
Wrong assumption
  • Within British American Tobacco, flavor
    ingredients are not used any more on low tar
    cigarettes than on higher yield cigarettes
  • - menthol is an exception
  • - its use increases as tar yield decreases

11
STUDIES ON INGREDIENTS SINCE 1950s
  • Pyrolysis
  • Effects on smoke chemistry
  • Mouse skin painting
  • Inhalation toxicity
  • In vitro bioassays - genotoxicity
  • - cytotoxicity

12
PUBLISHED REVIEWS ON TOBACCO INGREDIENTS
  • Paschke, Scherer and Heller, 2002
  • Rodgman, 2002, two reviews, including much
    previously unpublished RJRT work
  • Dixon et al., 2000, effects of ammonia
    ingredients on nicotine transfer and
    bioavailability

13
RECENT MAJOR STUDIES ON INGREDIENTS
  • Carmines et al., 2002, four papers chemistry
    and biology
  • Gaworski et al., 1997-2002, four papers biology
  • Baker et al., 2004, four papers pyrolysis,
    chemistry and biology

14
Paschke, Scherer and Heller
  • 198 papers/patents from 1952-2002 on ingredients
    reviewed
  • Over 300 ingredients
  • Smoke chemistry 150 single ingredients 61
    combinations
  • Pyrolysis (161 papers)
  • Smoke biological activity (37 papers)

15
Paschke, Scherer and Heller - Conclusions
  • Tobacco ingredients used commercially do not
    increase the biological activity of cigarette
    smoke
  • Many gaps in knowledge on pyrolysis and transfer
    to smoke
  • Standard analytical methods needed for influence
    of ingredients on smoke chemistry

16
Rodgman Reviews - (1) Flavorings -
(2) Casings
  • Includes previously unpublished RJRT studies
  • Includes work aimed at identifying precursors of
    smoke toxins
  • -predicted that relatively volatile flavors
    would distil out of cigarette burning zone
  • -studies on ingredients that could potentially
    generate smoke toxins

17
Rodgman - Conclusions
  • Neither flavorings nor casing and humectant
    ingredients added to tobacco during commercial
    cigarette manufacture in the USA increase the
    toxicity of cigarette smoke

18
Carmines and co-workers, 2002
  • Study of 333 ingredients added to tobacco in 3
    mixtures at normal and 1.5 3 x normal use
  • Effects on 51 Hoffmann analytes in smoke
  • Effects on Ames and neutral red uptake bioassays
  • Effects on sub-chronic inhalation toxicity
    (90-day rat inhalation)

19
Carmines and co-workers - conclusions
  • The addition of the 333 ingredients had not
    affected the toxicity of smoke, even in the
    exaggerated high level mixtures.

20
Gaworski et al., 1997 - 2002
  • Effects on biological activity of 175 ingredients
    singly and in combinations
  • Sub-chronic smoke toxicity (90-day inhalation
    using rats)
  • Mouse-skin painting

21
Gaworski et al., conclusions
  • Ingredients had no discernible effect on
    inhalation toxicity or tumor-promoting activity
    of smoke

22
  • BAT STUDIES
  • Pyrolyse in isolation look at products
  • 2. Add to cigarette and see what happens to
  • smoke chemistry Hoffmann analytes
  • 3. In vitro bioassays
  • 4. Inhalation toxicity

23
  • ADD TO CIGARETTES
  • 482 ingredients
  • 460 flavors
  • 1 flavor/solvent
  • 1 solvent
  • 7 preservatives
  • 5 binders
  • 5 humectants
  • 1 filler
  • 2 process aids (one is water)
  • Mixtures added to US blended tobaccos
  • 19 Test cigarettes in 3 series made
  • 44 Hoffmann analytes determined
  • Bioassays and inhalation

24
  • CIGARETTE SERIES
  • Series A Flavorings
  • Series B Flavorings and casings
  • Sheet ingredients
  • Series C Casings

25
  • Inhalation toxicity
  • 90-day inhalation with rats
  • Series A, B and C cigarettes no
    statistically-significant differences in the
    animals subjected to smoke from the test and
    control cigarettes

26
Cigarette series A Ames test (TA98 S9)
27
  • In vitro bioassays on smoke particulate matter
  • 1. Genotoxic endpoints
  • - Ames
  • - Micronucleus bioassay
  • 2. Non-genotoxic endpoint
  • - Neutral red uptake for cytotoxicity
  • None of the test cigarette particulate matters
    produced changes different from their controls

28
  • Three approaches to assess chemical
  • effects of ingredients
  • 1. Add to cigarette and see what happens to
  • smoke chemistry
  • 2. Pyrolyse in isolation
  • 3. Add labelled substance and measure
  • labelled products

29
  • Approaches in present pyrolysis study
  • Develop pyrolysis to simulate conditions during
    smoking
  • Use pyrolysis to measure amount of decomposition
    during smoking

30
  • SOME DEFINITIONS (1)
  • Pyrolysis Decomposition due to heat
  • Pyrosynthesis Thermal decomposition of substance
    followed by reaction of their decomposition
    products to form new, larger molecules

31
  • SOME DEFINITIONS (2)
  • Pyrolysis in inert atmosphere
  • Thermal decomposition, pyrosynthetic reactions
    can occur
  • Pyrolysis in atmosphere containing oxygen
  • Combustion reactions can also occur
  • Sometimes called oxygen-sensitised or
    combustion-sensitised pyrolysis

32
Distillation-Pyrolysis Zone
Combustion Zone
Air
33
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34
PYROLYSIS
  • Pyrolysis techniques used in many studies over
    many years to establish component-smoke product
    relationships
  • Many false relationships published
  • Laboratory pyrolysis conditions must match
    combustion conditions inside cigarette

35
Example (1) of a False Pyrolysis Relationship
  • Schmeltz Schlotzhauer (1968) pyrolysed menthol
    at 600C 860C
  • They found 22 84 pyrolysed respectively
  • The pyrolysis products included phenol
    benzoapyrene
  • BUT smoking of cigarettes containing
    radiolabelled menthol, shows that 99 of the
    menthol transfers to the mainstream intact. No
    phenol or benzoapyrene is detected.

36
Example (2) of a False Pyrolysis Relationship
  • Schmeltz et al. (1979) pyrolysed labelled
    nicotine added to tobacco in combustion tubes at
    600 - 900C
  • The nicotine underwent simple degradation to
    pyridines, and extensive degradation and
    re-arrangement to quinolines, arylnitriles,
    aromatic hydrocarbons.
  • They also smoked the cigarettes.
  • They found much of the nicotine distilled
    unchanged to MS and SS smoke, small amount of
    simple degradation to pyridines, and no extensive
    degradation.

37
TOBACCO PYROLYSIS - DEVELOPMENT OF AUTHENTIC
CONDITIONS - 1
  • Mapped out cigarette combustion conditions
  • (Baker, 1970s/1980s)

38
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39
TOBACCO PYROLYSIS - DEVELOPMENT OF AUTHENTIC
CONDITIONS - 2
  • Effect of pyrolysis conditions
  • temperature, heating rate, atmosphere
  • (Tiller Gentry, 1977 Muramatsu et al., 1979
    Baker, 1980s Stotesbury, 1990s)

40
TOBACCO PYROLYSIS - DEVELOPMENT OF AUTHENTIC
CONDITIONS - 3
  • Transfer of labelled substances from cigarette to
    smoke
  • (Larson Harlow, 1958 Jenkins et al., 1970s
    Houseman,1973 Schmeltz el al., 1979 Best,1987
    Eble, 1987 J. D. Green et al., 1989 Stevens
    and Borgerding, 1999, Stotesbury et al., 2000)

41
TOBACCO PYROLYSIS CONDITIONS (BAT STUDIES)
  • Atmosphere of 9 O2 in N2
  • Gas flow of 5 ml/s
  • Hold at 300oC for 5 s
  • Heat from 300C to 900oC at 30 oC/s
  • Hold at 900oC for 5 s

42
Schematic of Pyroprobe interface with GC
Heated interface
Pyrolysis gas in
Probe
Septum purge
Injection port
Split vent
To MS
GC column
43
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44
Results of pyrolysis versus unchanged labelled
transfer to mainstream smoke
45
USE OF PYROLYSIS IN ASSESSING INGREDIENTS
  • Pyrolysis system developed gives good predictions
    of smoke transfer/pyrolytic behaviour of
    relatively volatile tobacco ingredients added to
    cigarette in small amounts
  • For involatile substances, the pyrolysis system
    tends to overestimate the amount of decomposition
    that occurs during smoking
  • Useful screening tool to indicate which
    ingredients undergo significant decomposition
    during smoking

46
PYROLYSIS OF SINGLE-SUBSTANCE, SEMI-VOLATILE
INGREDIENTS (CUMULATIVE)
  • 291 flavour ingredients pyrolysed
  • 92 (32) transfer to smoke with lt1 decomposition
  • 184 (63) transfer to smoke with lt5
    decomposition
  • 248 (85) transfer to smoke with lt20
    decomposition

47
FOR INGREDIENTS THAT DO UNDERGO PYROLYSIS, CAN
CALCULATE MAXIMUM LEVEL OF EACH PYROLYSIS PRODUCT
IN MAINSTREAM SMOKE FOR UNFILTERED CIGARETTE
  • Productmax (µg)
  • Weight of ingredient in cigarette (µg) max.
    appication level
  • x Proportion of product in pyrolysate
  • x Proportion of tobacco burnt in puffing 0.5
  • x Proportion of transfer of ingredient/product
    to MS smoke 100

48
Examples of maximum pyrolysis yields from
semi-volatile ingredients and cigarette smoke
yields (µg/cigarette)
Ingredient Product Max. level from ingredient Typical smoke level (non-filter cigarette)
Anisyl phenylacetate Phenol 0.03 80 - 160
Benzyl cinnamate Styrene 0.2 10 - 20
Cinnamyl cinnamate Phenol 0.2 80 - 160
a-Methylbenzyl acaetate Styrene 0.1 10 - 20
Phenylacaetc acid Toluene 0.07 100 - 200
p-Tolyl acatate Cresol 0.09 11 - 37
49
FOR SINGLE-SUBSTANCE, SEMI-VOLATILE INGREDIENTS
THAT DO UNDERGO PYROLYSIS
  • Hoffmann analytes detected amongst pyrolysis
    products generally low/insignificant compared to
    smoke yields (lt5)

50
Pyrolysis of non-volatile tobacco ingredients
  • 159 non-volatile and complex ingredients
  • Most ingredients decomposed in the pyrolyser
  • many products in small amounts
  • significant levels of some Hoffmann analytes
    predicted
  • Pyrolysis products with toxicological concern
  • - checked by adding ingredient to cigarette
  • - smoked by machine
  • - comparing smoke yields to control (no
    ingredient) cigarette

51
Comparison of 2-furfural predicted by pyrolysis
and measured by smoking
Ingredient Max. level predicted by pyrolysis (µg/cig) Smoke Analysis Smoke Analysis Smoke Analysis
Ingredient Max. level predicted by pyrolysis (µg/cig) added to cigarette Test cig. yield (µg/cig) Control cig. yield (µg/cig)
Cellulose 410 2.4 7.7 11.0
Sorbitol 5,500 3.6 7.8 8.4
Sugar, brown 6,900 6.2 9.4 11.0
Sugar, invert 11,000 7.0 6.5 4.4
Sugar, white 10,000 10.5 12.8 11.0
Corn syrup 14,000 6.2 5.2 4.4
Honey 2,100 4.5 5.4 4.4
52
For 2-furfural generated from non-volatile
saccharides, pyrolysis experiments have grossly
overestimated the amount formed during
smoking.Pyrolysis also predicts generation of
formaldehyde from saccharide ingredients.
(Formaldehyde not detected by MS system so used
FTIR system.)
53
Generation of formaldehyde during pyrolysis
54
SMOKE CHEMISTRY
  • Compare smoke yields of Hoffmann analytes in
    test cigarette (with ingredients) with yields in
    control cigarette (without the ingredients)

55
  • CIGARETTE SERIES
  • Series A Flavorings
  • Series B Flavorings and casings
  • Sheet ingredients
  • Series C Casings

56
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58
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60
SMOKE CHEMISTRY RESULTS FLAVORINGS - OVERALL
SUMMARY
  • Flavorings have either no significant effect on
    mainstream yields of Hoffmann analytes relative
    to control, or produce occasional changes in
    individual analyte levels ( and -)
  • The significance of most of these occasional
    changes were not present when the long-term
    variability of the methodology was taken into
    account
  • Conclude that flavorings have no effect on smoke
    chemistry

61
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63
SMOKE CHEMISTRY RESULTS CASINGS, SHEET
ADDITIVES - OVERALL SUMMARY
  • Usually no significant effect on TPM, nicotine
    and CO
  • Some Hoffmann analyte levels affected,
    generally by up to /- 15 , not significant
    within long-term variability
  • Significant decreases in nitrosamines (up to
    30), phenols (up to 44), and aromatic amines
    (up to 26) with some mixtures
  • Carbonyls significantly increased with some
    mixtures
  • - HCHO increased by up to 73 with mixtures
    containing high levels of sugars
  • - HCHO increased by 68, possibly due to
    cellulosic and polysccharide materials

64
HCHO YIELDS DIFFERENT STUDIES
INGREDIENT STUDY INCREASE (µg) INCREASE ()
Cellulose BAT 16.1 68
Cellulose NCI (1980) 44 38

Sugar BAT 26.0 73
Sugar - low Carmines et al. (2002) 10.7 65
Sugar - high Carmines et al. (2002) 9.9 60
65
FORMALDEHYDE YIELDS FOR CIGARETTES WITH TAR
YIELD OF ca. 13 mg
  • Experimental cigarette 62 µg
  • UK benchmark study 30 - 56 µg
  • World study 30 - 90 µg

66
BAT STUDY - CONCLUSIONS - 1
  • 2/3 of volatile flavorings transfer to smoke with
    lt5 decomposition
  • Where decomposition does occur, Hoffmann
    analytes detected amongst products generally
    low/insignificant compared to smoke yields (lt5)
  • Non-volatile ingredients generally decompose in
    pyrolyser and pyrolysis experiments overestimate
    amount of compounds formed during smoking

67
BAT STUDY - CONCLUSIONS - 2
  • Flavorings have no significant effect on levels
    of Hoffmann analytes in mainstream smoke
  • The vast majority of casings and sheet
    ingredients have little effect on level of
    Hoffmann analytes in smoke. Several are
    decreased and one is increased.

68
BAT STUDY - CONCLUSIONS - 3
  • The inhalation toxicity of the smoke from all the
    test cigarettes was the same as that from their
    respective control cigarettes
  • Within the sensitivity and specificity of three
    in vitro bioassays, the specific activity of
    smoke condensate was not changed by the addition
    of ingredients to the cigarette
  • -Ames test
  • -Mammalian cell micronucleus assay
  • -Neutral red uptake cytotoxicity assay

69
OVERALL CONCLUSIONS
  • THERE IS BROAD AGREEMENT BETWEEN
  • Chemical and biological studies published over 50
    years (Paschke et al., 2002, Rodgman, 2002)
  • Chemical and biological work undertaken by R.J.
    Reynolds (included in the Rodgman reviews)
  • Philip Morris chemical and biological studies
    (Carmines et al., 2002)
  • Lorillard biological studies (Gaworski et al.,
    1997 2002)
  • BAT pyrolysis, smoke chemistry and biological
    studies (Baker et al., 2004)

70
BROAD CONCLUSIONS
  • Tobacco ingredients used commercially do not
    increase the biological activity of cigarette
    smoke
  • Most ingredients do not affect the smoke levels
    of Hoffmann analytes

71
  • BAT PAPERS ON INGREDIENTS
  • R.R. Baker and G. Smith, Toxicological aspects of
    tobacco flavour ingredients, Recent Advances in
    Tobacco Science, 2003, 29, 47-76.
  • R.R. Baker and L.J. Bishop, The pyrolysis of
    tobacco ingredients, J.Anal.Appl. Pyrolysis,
    2004, 71(1), 223-311.
  • R.R. Baker, J.R. da Silva and G.Smith, The effect
    of tobacco ingredients on smoke chemistry. Part
    I Flavourings and additives, Food Chem. Toxicol,
    2004, 42 Supplement, 3-37.
  • R.R. Baker, J.R. da Silva and G.Smith, The effect
    of tobacco ingredients on smoke chemistry. Part
    II Casing ingredients, Food Chem. Toxicol, 2004,
    42 Supplement, 39-52.
  • R.R. Baker, E.D. Massey and G.Smith, An overview
    of the effects of tobacco ingredients on smoke
    chemistry and toxicity, Food Chem. Toxicol, 2004,
    42 Supplement, 53-83.
  • R.R. Baker and L.J. Bishop, The pyrolysis of
    non-volatile tobacco ingredients using a system
    that simulates cigarette combustion conditions,
    Paper presented at 16th International Symposium
    on Analytical and Applied Pyrolysi, Alicante,
    Spain, May 2004.
  • 7. R.R. Baker, S. Coburn, C. Liu and J. Tetteh,
    Pyrolysis of eleven polysaccharide tobacco
    ingredients a TGA-FTIR investigation, Paper
    presented at 16th International Symposium on
    Analytical and Applied Pyrolysi, Alicante, Spain,
    May 2004.
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