Philip Morris
Tobacco and Tobacco Smoke
Fields
- Author
- Hoffmann, D.
- Wynder, E.L.
- Type
- ABST, ABSTRACT
- Document File
- 1000795119/1000795292/C81 04311 American Cancer Society
- Site
- R100
- Request
- Stmn/R1-102
- Author (Organization)
- Semin Oncol
- Master ID
- 1000795121/5292
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- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Area
- CENTRAL FILES/DATABASE CORRESPONDENCE
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- pnv48e00
Document Images
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Tobacco and tobacco smoke.
Wynder EL ; Hoffmann D
Epidemiologic studies have demonstrated a causal relation between
smoking of cigarettes and cancer of the lung in man. Women
smokers, cigar, and pipe smokers also face an increased risk for
lung cancer. Prospective and retrospective studies have found a
correlation between smoking of cigarettes, cigars, and pipes and
cancer of the oral cavity, larynx, and esophagus and for
cigarette smokers increased risks to develop cancer of the
pancreas, kidney, and urinary bladder. Dose responses have been
established between number of cigarettes smoked and cancer of the
respiratory and upper digestive tract. Tobacco chewers face an
increased risk for cancer of the mouth and esophagus. Tobacco
smoke has induced tumors of the lung in the dogs and of the
larynx of hamsters. The particulate matter of the smoke is
carcinogenic to the skin of mice and rabbits, and the bronchi and
connective tissue of rats. In tobacco smoke were identified tumor
initiators, tumor promoters, cocarcinogens and organ specific
carcinogens. Chewing tobacco is a tumor promoting agent and
contains traces of tobacco specific and carcinogenic
nitrosamines. Ten to 15 yr after giving up smoking the ex-smoker
faces the same low risk to develop cancer of the upper 4igestive
tract, the lung, the pancreas, and the urinary tract as the
nonsmoker. It should be our goal, therefore, to prevent young
people from starting the smoking habit and to convince the smoker
to quit smoking. So far, we can report no success in terms of
decreasing smoking habits among younger people. On the other
hand, we can take satisfaction from the fact that antismoking
propaganda has had an effect on college educated males, that
among the population as a whole, there is a considerable number
of exsmokers; that smoking cessation clinics do prove cost
effective and if they were to become part of every health care
center, they could help a large number of heavy smokers who
cannot seem to stop smoking on their own. We can also report that
there has been a significant reduction in the tar yield of
American cigarettes, a reduction which we hope will continue;
that the tumorigenic activity of tobacco as measured in animal
studies, has decreased; and that as a consequence of the above,
the risk of lung cancer and other tobacco-related cancers among
smokers of these cigarettes is lower than in years past. It is
unlikely that man will ever be able to inhale smoke components "gs
harmless as unpolluted air, but as long as we have a society
which accepts this habit and as long as people find satisfaction
in smoking, we must work towards the day when tobacco-related
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cancers and other diseases will be reduced to a minimum. With the
world wide coperation of the scientific community, the
Departments of Agriculture, and the tobacco industry, it is our
hope that this goal will be achieved.
SO - Semin Oncol 3(1):5-15, Mar 76
