The Food and Drug Administration is weighing whether to allow a tobacco company to do something it's never done before — claim that one of its products is less risky than cigarettes.
The company, Swedish Match of Stockholm, has applied to the FDA to designate its General brand of snus (rhymes with "loose") as safer than other versions of tobacco.
Snus are tiny cloth packages that look a little like tea bags. But instead of tea, each bag is filled with moist tobacco powder. It comes in a variety of flavors. Snus is designed to give users another way to get nicotine and the taste of tobacco when they can't or don't want to smoke a cigarette or cigar.
Swedish Match wants the FDA to let the company remove most of the health warnings on its tins of snus (including a warning that the product increases a user's risk for mouth cancer or other tooth and gum problems), and change the label to say that snus is safer than cigarettes.
"What we're asking the FDA about is to allow us to inform the public with more truthful information about the health effects, because we believe that the health effects are clearly different than for most other products that are out there," says Lars Erik Rutqvist, the company's senior vice president for scientific affairs.
He says snus doesn't increase the risk for any of the big problems caused by smoking, such as lung cancer and lung disease, because there's no smoke involved.
"Snus is at least 90 percent safer than cigarettes," Rutqvist says, "and there are some who claim that it's more than 99 percent less risky than cigarettes."
It's important that people know that, he says, because snus can help smokers kick their much riskier habits.
"There are a lot of smokers out there who are looking for less risky alternatives to their cigarettes, but who find it difficult to give up tobacco altogether," he says, noting that cigarette smoking decreased in Sweden as snus use increased.
The tobacco industry has a long history of making misleading claims about the safety of its products. But some public health watchers of the tobacco industry say they are keeping an open mind about Swedish Match's request.
"This product appears to be less harmful than cigarette smoking," says Michael Eriksen, the dean of the Georgia State University School of Public Health. "And if that's established by the evidence that's presented to the FDA, then I think they should be able to say that in their advertising and in warning statements."
But many experts are also being cautious. Dr. Michael Steinberg, who directs the Tobacco Dependence Program at Rutgers University, says snus may be safer than cigarettes, but it's not totally safe.
"Although there's evidence that snus may have reduced harm," he says, "reduced harm products are not the same as safe products."
Steinberg notes that snus contains nicotine, "which has physiologic risks in terms of raising heart rate, blood pressure etc." That could increase the risk for health problems such as strokes. There's also evidence snus may increase the risk for other health problems, such as pancreatic cancer.
Swedish Match questions that possible association and argues there's no evidence the product increases the risk for heart attacks or strokes.
Steinberg says another worry is that snus may end up helping smokers keep smoking by giving them kind of a crutch to get them through those times when they can't have a cigarette. And, Steinberg says, a change in the label could contribute to hooking a new generation on nicotine.
"If you imagine a young person who sees on a label that this is a less harmful tobacco product, they may interpret that as, 'Oh, this is not harmful at all. I might as well try it and see what it's all about,' " Steinberg says. "And that person can still become addicted to the nicotine effects, which could either lead to them becoming a long-term smokeless tobacco user, or could escalate to them starting to smoke cigarettes."
The FDA plans a two-day hearing, beginning April 9, to get advice about whether snus should become the first tobacco product that can officially claim it's safer than cigarettes.
Transcript
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
Now we have the story of an industry trying to adapt to a hostile environment. It's the tobacco industry, which, of course, faces the health hazards of its own products. Now the Food and Drug Administration is trying to decide whether to let a tobacco company claim one of its products is less risky than cigarettes. The company is called Swedish Match. It is based in Stockholm, and the product is something called snus. NPR health correspondent Rob Stein has the story.
ROB STEIN, BYLINE: The air inside the tobacco store in downtown Washington, D.C. is thick with smoke when Mike Bajit ducks inside. Most of the customers are there to buy and try cigars. But today, Bajit's picking up something else.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
MIKE BAJIT: So just the one pack of snus today. Thank you.
STEIN: Bajit checks to make sure the small, round tin is the right flavor.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
BAJIT: How much?
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: $8.25.
BAJIT: $8.25.
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Two dollars is your change.
BAJIT: Thank you very much.
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Thank you.
BAJIT: All right, I got my pack of snus.
STEIN: Bajit pops the tin open to show me what's inside.
BAJIT: As you can see, these are tiny cloth packages.
STEIN: Tiny cloth packages that look kind of like tea bags. But instead of tea, each bag is filled with flavored tobacco. Bajit pulls one out and slips it under his upper lip on the side of his mouth.
BAJIT: There is a slight tingling sensation. It has mint flavor - nice to have a snus right now, yeah.
STEIN: Bajit says when he can't smoke a cigarette or a cigar, snus is an easier way to get a little nicotine and the taste of tobacco. And snus doesn't make him have to spit like traditional chewing tobacco does. Snus has been around for a while, but it's now become the focus of an intense public health debate. The company that makes snus wants the FDA to let the company remove most of the health warnings on its tins and say snus is safer than cigarettes. Lars Erik Rutqvist is the top scientist at Swedish Match.
LARS ERIK RUTQVIST: What we're asking the FDA about is to allow us to inform the public with more truthful information about the health effects because we believe that the health effects are clearly different than for most other products that are out there.
STEIN: The company says snus doesn't increase the risk for any of the big problems caused by smoking, like lung cancer, because there's no smoke involved.
RUTQVIST: Snus is at least 90 percent safer than cigarettes. And there are some who claim that it's more than 99 percent less risky than cigarettes.
STEIN: Rutqvist says it's important people know that because snus can help smokers kick their much riskier habits.
RUTQVIST: There are a lot of smokers out there who are looking for less risky alternatives to their cigarettes but who find it difficult to give up tobacco altogether.
STEIN: The tobacco industry does have a long history of making misleading claims, think light cigarettes, which turned out to be just as bad as regular cigarettes. But some tobacco experts are keeping an open mind this time - why? - because it's the first time the FDA will decide whether there's enough scientific evidence to support what the company wants to say. Michael Eriksen is the dean of the Georgia State University School of Public Health.
MICHAEL ERIKSEN: This product appears to be less harmful than cigarette smoking. And if that's established by the evidence that they have presented to the FDA, then I think they should be able to say that in their advertising and in warning statements.
STEIN: But some experts are skeptical. Michael Steinberg heads the Rutgers Tobacco Control Program. He says snus may be safer than cigarettes, but it's not totally safe.
MICHAEL STEINBERG: It certainly still contains nicotine, which has physiologic effects in terms of raising heart rate, blood pressure, etcetera. And it can increase risk for certain cardiovascular outcomes, such as stroke.
STEIN: There's also evidence snus may increase the risk for other health problems, such as pancreatic cancer.
STEINBERG: So although there's evidence that snus may have reduced harm, reduced harm products are not the same as safe products.
STEIN: Another worry is that snus may actually help smokers keep smoking by giving them kind of a crutch to get them through those times when they can't have a cigarette. And, Steinberg says, the move could end up hooking a new generation on nicotine.
STEINBERG: If you imagine a young person who sees on a label that this is a less harmful tobacco product, they may interpret that as, oh, this is not harmful at all. I might as well try it and see what it's all about. And that person can still become addicted to the nicotine effects, which could either lead to them becoming a long-term smokeless tobacco user or could escalate to them starting to smoke cigarettes.
STEIN: The FDA is holding a two-day hearing beginning April 9 to get advice about whether snus should become the first tobacco product that can officially claim it's safer than cigarettes. Rob Stein, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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