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Philip Morris

'health Effects of Passive Smoking: Assessment of Lung Cancer in Adults and Respiratory Disorders in Children' Notes on the Meeting of the US Environmental Protection Agency (Epa) Science Advisory Board (Sab) to Consider the External Review Draft Held at Crystal City, Washington Dc on 901204 and 901205

Date: 09 Dec 1990
Length: 25 pages
2501073504-2501073528
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Author
Lee, P.N.
Area
LEGAL DEPT/EEMA ARCHIVE
Document File
2501073421/2501073557/Ets General 900000 - 910000 Eema Legal Dpt.
Type
REPT, REPORT, OTHER
Named Organization
Americans for Nonsmokers Rights
American Cancer Society
Centers for Disease Control
Ciar, Center for Indoor Air Research
Coalition on Smoking or Health
Doctors Ought to Care
Epa Board
Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
Harvard
Hri, Health Research Inst,Roswell Park
Iarc
Nrc
RJR, R.J.Reynolds
Science Advisory Board
TI, Tobacco Inst
Washington Post
Women Vs Smoking Network
1990 World Smoking + Health Conference
Site
E35
Named Person
Aviado
Axelrad
Bayard, S.
Benowitz
Blot
Brown, K.
Burns, D.
Butler, W.J.
Clayton
Crawfordbrown, D.
Cummings
Curvall
Davis, D.L.
Debethizy
Dockery
Doll
Farland, W.H.
Flaak, R.
Flamm
Fleiss, J.L.
Garfinkel
Gibbons, J.D.
Giovani
Glantz, S.A.
Gori, G.
Gross, A.J.
Haley, N.
Hammond
Hiller
Hirayama
Hoffmann
Hood
Houston
Howard, G.
Huber, G.L.
Humble, C.
Idle
Janerich
Kabat, G.
Katzenstein, A.W.
Kilpatrick, S.J.
Knudson
Koppikar, A.
Laties
Layard, M.
Lee, P.N.
Levois, M.
Lewtas, J.
Lippmann
Lopez
Lowrey
Makosky
Mantel, N.
Moolgavkar
Okeeffe
Parrish
Peto
Pettiti
Poland, T.M.
Reasor
Repace
Ritchie
Robertson
Rockette
Rosenbaum, W.L.
Sanet
Schneider, B.
Shimizu
Sobue
Springall, A.
Sterling, T.D.
Stewart
Surgeon General
Switzer, P.
Thorslund, T.
Trichopoulos
Tweedie, R.
Uberla, K.
Varela
Wald
Weinkam, J.J.
Wells, A.J.
Will
Williams
Witorsch, P.
Witorsch, R.
Wu
Wynder, E.
Attachment
2501073503/2501073556
Master ID
2501073503/3556
Related Documents:
Litigation
Stmn/Produced
Date Loaded
31 Jan 1999
UCSF Legacy ID
xhi33e00

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"Health Effects of Passive Smokinz: Assessment of Lung Cancer in Adults and Respiratory Disorders in Children" Notes on the Meeting of the US Environmental Protection A encv (EPA) Science Advisory Board (SAB) to consider the External Review Draft held at Crystal City, Washington DC on 4 and 5 December 1990 Author : P N Lee Date : 9.12.90 1. Backg.round Earlier in the year the EPA had circulated for public comment a draft document entitled "Health Effects of Passive Smoking: Assessment of Lung Cancer in Adults and Respiratory Disorders in Children" and also a further draft document entitled "Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS): A Guide to Workplace Smoking Policies". The principal points to note in the main document were that: (i) It concluded based on the epidemiological evidence on spouse smoking and lung cancer that ETS was a Group A Carcinogen, i.e. an agent known to cause cancer in humans). (ii) It estimated that annually 3800 deaths a year from lung cancer in the USA among never and ex-smokers were the result of exposure to ETS, with 95% confidence limits cited as 1800-6100. 2501073504
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-2- (iii) It concluded that exposure of young children to ETS from parental smoking, particularly during infancy, is associated with increased prevalence of acute lower respiratory tract infections, respiratory symptoms of irritation, middle ear effusions and reduced lung function, growth and pulmonary development. (iv) It did not include deaths from other cancers, heart disease, non-neoplastic respiratory disease in adults, or from other causes in its risk assessment, considering that evidence of a causal relationship had not been demonstrated. Although EPA has no regulatory power to limit exposure to ETS, the document, when finalised, would carry great weight when attempting to bring in new laws in US states. The main purpose of the meeting in Crystal City was for the EPA to receive public comments and comments from the SAB on the draft so that they could either finalize the documents or perhaps resubmit a further draft to go through the comment procedure. Apparently EPA were actually under no obligation to ask for the SAB's advice or to act on it, but in practice they usually did take account of it. The documents could in fact not be finalized until they had been approved by a higher Committee (which met 3-monthly) after which they would become official EPA publications. The EPA had already received over 3000 pages of comments from over 100 individuals on the draft. At the meeting they promised they would provide a considered reply to the comments, but the level of detail this would go into was unclear. As I understood it the
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-3- written comments had not gone in full to the board, although each board member was sent by the Tobacco Institute a set of presentations to the SAB. This consisted of a volume giving 13 primary submissions on the ETS Lung Cancer Risk Assessment, a volume giving 3 submissions on the ETS Workplace Policy Guide and 7 Appendix Volumes giving the full texts of comments mainly by those who would be speaking or who had provided primary submissions. With the exception of Richard Tweedie's material from Australia, I was the only non US based consultant used by the Institute. I had provided a 12 page summary of my main comments (which related to lung cancer) in the primary submissions, and a commentary of some 38 pages, with Annexes which included my draft book on ETS and my draft paper on risk assessments in the Appendix Volumes. The Tobacco Institute had also provided a press release (for the day before the meeting) which outlined some of the flaws in the report. It also included a summary paragraph for each of the comments of all the people who had filed documents critical of the draft EPA ETS risk assessment. I have in my possession, for those who are interested, copies of: 1) The TI primary submissions volume 1, which includes comments by de Bethizy (Overall), Reasor/Will and Aviado (Toxicology/Chemistry/Dosimetry), LeVois/Layard, Tweedie and Lee (ETS Epidemiology General), Butler (Confounding), Fleiss/Gross, Tweedie, Howard and Switzer (Meta-analysis), Flamm (Regulatory Aspects), and Hood/R. Witorsch/P. Witorsch (Childhood Respiratory Diseases). 2501073506
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-4- 2) The TI press release 3) Detailed submissions of: W J Butler J L Fleiss and A J Gross J D Gibbons S A Glantz G Gori A J Gross N Haley G L Huber A W Katzenstein S J Kilpatrick M Layard and M LeVois N Mantel R J Reynolds Tobacco Company (including Appendix by Dr George Howard) B Schneider A Springall T D Sterling, J J Weinkam, W L Rosenbaum and T M Poland P Switzer R Tweedie K Uberla A J Wells E Wynder I also of course have copies of the original draft reports, and my own submissions, including a later commentary on Wells' submission. The only paper presented at the meeting which I have copies of is that by A J Wells, although I am on a mailing list for copies of other materials. Ultimately a transcript of the whole 2 days will become available. A list of the SAB members is attached as Annex A, with the agenda attached as Annex B. Annex C is a copy of the official letter requesting advice from the SAB. It includes 8 questions relating to lung cancer in adults and 3 questions relating to
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-5- 1) respiratory disorders in children on which the SAB's advice was particularly sought. I also have a copy of a document summarizing what is known about the board members and their views on smoking and ETS. A red herring Before the meeting there had been allegations in the press that members of the Board had been "bought" by the industry. Some of these allegations arose out of the fct that some SAB members had conducted peer reviews for the CIAR (The Centre for Indoor Air Research set up a couple of years ago by inter alia parts of the tobacco industry) and had received money for this. The net result of all this was that the 100 or so of us who were present had to waste an hour while every board member related all his work on tobacco and ETS and who had provided funding and to whom. There was in fact no indication that the SAB were biassed towards industry, rather the reverse as one of the members, Dr David Burns, was well known for his militant anti-smoking beliefs. It was a pity no-one made the simple point that when considering an industry's problems it helped to have scientists who actually knew something about the subject. As most research on an industry's problems was generally paid for by that industry, one really had to ask whether restricting attention to squeaky-clean ignorami, however intelligent, was really desirable. To his credit the chairman of the SAB did point out that N [A there were a lot of knowledge gaps and that the CIAR work was very 0 O useful, given EPA only have a budget of 3 mn. dollars a year for ca Cn 0 indoor air research, only 30-40% of which is on ETS. OD I
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-6- 3. Introductory talks by the EPA Atielrad pointed out that the EPA's policy guide was not dependent on the ETS risk assessment. Their view was that, even in the absence of complete scientific data, "it is prudent to minimize exposure to indoor pollutants". They also could have relied on the "credible" reports of the Surgeon-General and the NRC. However they felt their policy guide would carry more weight if they evaluated the ETS studies since 1986, quantified the extent of risk and made a classification of ETS as a carcinogen. He also noted the EPA had received 115 submissions on time and 23 late and that they would be preparing a detailed response document. Steve Bayard who was the EPA project officer in charge of the ETS work noted the people who had prepared the various sections of the draft risk assessment. Kenneth Brown had been responsible for the epidemiological assessment, the meta-analysis, the risk assessment, and Appendix B which gave relevant mathematical formulae relating to the adjustment for smoking habit misclassification. Charles Humble had prepared Appendix A, which provided a detailed summary and analysis of the post-1986 case-control studies of ETS and lung cancer. Douglas Crawford-Brown had prepared Appendix C, which discussed the dosimetry of ETS, while Todd Thorslund had prepared Appendix D, which described a potential framework for dose-response modelling for ETS and lung cancer. Advice had also been received by Joellen Lewtas and Agatha Koppikar. Bayard noted
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-7- their estimate of 3800 deaths per year was incorrect due to a typographical error! The correct figure should have been 3700!! His discussion on the difficulties of interpreting the ETS epidemiology and the meta-analysis was rambling and often incoherent (at one stage Lippmann told him to speed up and get to the point). Amazingly he cited evidence from a 1990 paper by Wu-Williams and Sanet (an SAB member) of a significant dose-related trend from the overall proving a cause and effect relationship! data as Thorslund briefly presented his dose-response model fitting work. Based on data from Doll and Peto and from Hammond he fitted the Moolgavkar-Knudson model to obtain a mathematical relationship between lifetime cancer risk and number of cigarettes per day given age of starting and stopping. If one plugged in ;i to 1 cigaretts per day which he (totally unreasonably) felt was appropriate for the cigarette equivalent for ETS exposure, then one ended up with risk predictions consistent with the epidemiology. He then gave estimates of risk in extreme situations, including an absurd figure of a lifetime risk of over 50% of lung cancer for a heavily ETS exposed individual who was an extensive metaboliser of debrisoquine. Koppikar discussed briefly the evidence on respiratory disease in children. When mentioning sources of bias it was notable that she totally failed to refer to transmission of infection or confounding by social class. 2501073510
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-8- Brown, who had written the key part of the document, had clearly read my detailed submission as he referred to it a number of times. He presented some slides in which he had included data from studies that had been omitted from the report - most notably the large US case-control study of Varela and Janerich, but also the studies of Shimizu and Sobue and the second study of Kabat. He presented estimates based partly on data in my report and partly using misclassification corrections provided by Wells showing that, whereas the Asian studies showed a statistically significant increased risk in relation to spouse smoking (relative risk 1.37, 95% limits 1.17-1.61), the US studies did not (relative risk 1.02, 95% limits 0.80-1.28). He did not comment on the fact that essentially all the data on misclassification came from Western populations so that the Asian relative risk estimates were highly dubious. Presentations by industry The intention had been for there to be 12 presentations. By the time Parish, de Bethizy, LeVois, Tweedie and Butler had talked, we were then told we only had half an hour left. After discussion it was agreed that we would drop Clayton, Witorsch and Robertson, concluding with Switzer, Fleiss, myself and Flamm. In practice this made little difference as there was very small direct response of the SAB to points made and there were written submissions anyway. The basis of my own presentation, including slides, is attached as Appendix D, though in practice I modified it 2501073511
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-9- somewhat to comment on points already raised. I will not describe the points made by the other speakers here, although I will refer to some issues in section 8, "Questions of interpretation". Generally the great majority of what was said came over as reasonable, although the extent to which the points will be taken up is open to question. 5. Presentations by coalition on smoking or health Trichopoulos, now Professor of Epidemiology at Harvard, went through some of the issues of interpretation. He contrasted the ETS situation with that of alar, use of which was banned without any real evidence, and with that of fat in diet, reduction of which was national policy, based on evidence no stronger than that for ETS. Although his talk purported to be an academic discussion of issues of interpretation, there were major omissions (any mention of smoking habit misclassification bias) and major distortions (only advantages of using Asian data in meta-analysis were cited, with no mention of the very relevant disadvantages - see section 8). Garfinkel, who has now retired from the American Cancer Society, was very disappointing. I had half expected him to present a whole lot of new results from the two huge Cancer Prevention Studies. Instead he only described results from his 1981 and particularly his 1985 lung cancer studies. I had heard him give this talk about 3 times before! 2501073512 I
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-10- Dockery gave an extremely superficial view of the ETS evidence. Essentially he was saying that because there was a preponderance of positive lung cancer relative risks in relation to spouse smoking, because the confidence limits didn't indicate any obvious inconsistencies between the studies, and because according to his funnel plot analysis there was no suggestion of publication bias, it was clear that ETS caused lung cancer. There was no discussion of various relevant sources of potential bias. 6. Public comments Devra Lee Davis, who was involved in the NRC report, quoted estimates of Lopez and Peto that active smoking caused 3 mn. deaths a year worldwide now, predicted to rise to 10 mn. in 30 years time. She offered the SAB copies of the NRC report (it tells one a lot that some didn't have it already!) and emphasized the children's data, drawing attention to evidence of effects of paternal smoking. Cummings of Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, New York, presented evidence from his own studies of cotinine levels in smokers, non-smokers married to smokers, and non-smokers married to non-smokers. His data showed low levels of smoking habit misclassification, low levels of between spouse smoking habit concordance and a relatively high level of cotinine in non-smokers married to smokers. I will refer to these data, which considerably increase uncorrected relative risk estimates, in section 8.

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