Abstract

Mainstream cigarette smoke (MSS) from 12 US cigarette brands and two reference cigarettes was evaluated to determine concentrations of dioxins (i.e., polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs), polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs), and dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)). The study included three ‘tar’ ranges based on Federal Trade Commission (FTC) determination: Low Yield (LY)⩽5.5, Medium Yield (MY) 9.6–12.2, and High Yield (HY)⩾14.5mg/cig. Of the brands studied, the HY cigarettes yielded the greatest mean concentrations of 2005 World Health Organization Toxic Equivalents (WHO-TEQs) on a per cigarette basis. WHO-TEQ levels in LY cigarettes were significantly lower than for HY cigarettes (p=0.039) on a yield per cigarette basis and WHO-TEQ concentrations correlated with ‘tar’ yield (r=0.73, p=0.007), as did concentration on a WHO-TEQ per body mass per day basis (r=0.73, p=0.007). However, a statistically significant relationship was not observed between ‘tar’ yield levels and WHO-TEQ concentrations on a per mg Total Particulate Matter (TPM) basis. Concentrations for all brands tested ranged from 0.44 to 3.88fg WHO-TEQ/mg TPM. Maximum daily exposure estimates calculated from this range (0.004–0.074pg WHO-TEQ/kg bw/day) are below the current WHO Tolerable Daily Intake range of 1–5pg/kg bw/day.

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