Summary
2008, Vol. 20, No. 7, Pages 695-721

Toxicological Comparisons of Three Styles of a Commercial U.S. Cigarette (Marlboro®) with the 1R4F Reference Cigarette

George J. Patskan, Kenneth F. Podraza, Kris Meurrens, Christopher R. E. Coggins, Bärbel Friedrichs, Birgit Gerstenberg, Willy Gomm, Peter Schnell, Regina Stabbert, Detlef Veltel, Susanne Weber and Piter Terpstra
Philip Morris USA, Inc., Richmond, Virginia, USA
Philip Morris Research Laboratories bvba, Leuven, Belgium
Carson Watts Consulting, King, North Carolina, USA
Philip Morris Research Laboratories GmbH, Cologne, Germany

Philip Morris USA Inc., Center for Research & Technology, 601 E. Jackson St., Richmond, VA, 23219, USA



Toxicological comparisons were made of three commercial cigarettes, namely Marlboro® full flavor, Marlboro Lights, and Marlboro Ultra Lights, with the 1R4F reference cigarette. The main comparison was a 90-d inhalation study with mainstream smoke at 150 mg total particulate matter per cubic meter, in Sprague-Dawley rats using 6 h/d and 7 d/w exposures. The principal endpoint was histopathology of the respiratory tract, along with examinations of free lung cell counts after broncho-alveolar lavage. Additional studies on mainstream smoke included Salmonella mutagenicity, cytotoxicity of particulate and gas/vapor phases, and analytical chemistry. The exposures produced effectively the same responses in each of the four groups, and the histopathology results in the commercial cigarette groups were also effectively the same. The 1R4F was also tested at 75 and 200 mg/m3, and most of the histopathology results obtained here showed dose-response relationships. The free lung cell responses were similar in the 1R4F/commercial cigarette comparison, and there were dose-related changes in the 1R4F groups, most notably for neutrophils. Most of the changes produced in the 90–d of exposure were resolved in a 42-d post-inhalation period. Responses in the in vitro and analytical assays for the four cigarettes were in general similar, when data were expressed either per mg TPM or per mg tar yield. There were judged to be no toxicologically meaningful differences between the profiles evaluated at similar smoke concentrations for the three commercial cigarettes and for the 1R4F using these assays.

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Forward Links to Citing Articles

Charles L. Gaworski, Heike Schramke, Joerg Diekmann, Thomas J. Meisgen, Franz J. Tewes, Detlef J. Veltel, Patrick M. Vanscheeuwijck, Narayanan Rajendran, Miguel Muzzio, Hans-Juergen Haussmann. (2009) Effect of filtration by activated charcoal on the toxicological activity of cigarette mainstream smoke from experimental cigarettes. Inhalation Toxicology 21:8, 688-704
Online publication date: 1-Jul-2009.
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Authors:
George J. Patskan
Kenneth F. Podraza
Kris Meurrens
Christopher R. E. Coggins
Bärbel Friedrichs
Birgit Gerstenberg
Willy Gomm
Peter Schnell
Regina Stabbert
Detlef Veltel
Susanne Weber
Piter Terpstra