Toxicological assessment of kretek cigarettes: Part 2: Kretek and American-blended cigarettes, smoke chemistry and in vitro toxicity

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yrtph.2014.12.001Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Three kretek cigarettes were compared to an American-blended cigarette.

  • Smoke chemistry and in vitro toxicity were investigated.

  • Results do not rise additional toxicological concerns regarding kreteks.

Abstract

Two commercial kretek cigarettes typical for the Indonesian market and a reference kretek cigarette were compared to the American-blended reference cigarette 2R4F by smoke chemistry characterization and in vitro cytotoxicity and mutagenicity assessments. Despite the widely diverse designs and deliveries of the selected kretek cigarettes, their smoke composition and in vitro toxicity data present a consistent pattern when data were normalized to total particulate matter (TPM) deliveries. This confirms the applicability of the studies’ conclusions to a wide range of kretek cigarette products. After normalization to TPM delivery, nicotine smoke yields of kretek cigarettes were 29–46% lower than that of the 2R4F. The yields of other nitrogenous compounds were also much lower, less than would be expected from the mere substitution of one third of the tobacco filler by clove material. Yields of light molecular weight pyrolytic compounds, notably aldehydes and hydrocarbons, were reduced, while yields of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons were unchanged and phenol yield was increased. The normalized in vitro toxicity was lowered accordingly, reflecting the yield reductions in gas-phase cytotoxic compounds and some particulate-phase mutagenic compounds. These results do not support a higher toxicity of the smoke of kretek cigarettes compared to American-blended cigarettes.

Keywords

Kretek
Eugenol
Smoke chemistry
Mutagenicity
Cytotoxicity

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