Thirdhand smoke: here to stay.
نویسنده
چکیده
The first time I had any inkling that nicotine might linger in a room was when I listened to a group of nicotine chemists complaining about how hard it is to keep nicotine out of their laboratories. Their gas chromatography and mass spectroscopy machines are expensive, complex and very sensitive. In order to detect nicotine and cotinine in samples from non-smokers exposed to secondhand smoke, they must scrupulously exclude nicotine and tobacco smoke from their laboratories. One chemist told a story of how experiments in his laboratory were ruined for weeks after new data cables were installed in the ceiling of the laboratory. Probable culprit: nicotine in the ceiling tiles and the dust above them, dating back 30 years to when people still smoked in laboratories at the university. Thirdhand smoke is a new concept in the field of tobacco control.While everyone who has ever noticed the lingering smell of stale smoke knows that something stays around after the smoke clears, exactly what that something is, how long it stays and what it means for human health has been little studied to date. The paper by Matt et al in this issue of Tobacco Control advances the study of thirdhand smoke by exploring one of the situations most likely to isolate thirdhand smoke exposure from concurrent exposure to secondhand smoke: rental housing. Their findings demonstrate that nicotine persists in homes previously occupied by smokers, and that non-smokers who move into these units have elevated levels of nicotine on their skin and in their bodies. The design of this experiment was very challenging; one can imagine approaching complete strangers who were in the middle of moving house and asking them to let researchers examine their homes and bodies, and the group is to be commended for persuading as many people to participate as they did. We do not know what the potential health effects of this low-level exposure to thirdhand smoke may be. Nicotine is a toxin that effects development of the nervous system and the lungs, but we don’t know if it has effects at concentrations this low. However, nicotine is not the only chemical to consider. Nicotine on indoor surfaces can react with the low levels of oxidant gases that are normally present in homes to form nitrosamines, including 1-(N-methyl-N-nitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridinyl)-4-butanal (NNA) and 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)1-butanone (NNK). Both of these tobacco-specific nitrosamines are normally found in the particulate phase, which means that once they form on a surface they will tend to stay in place. We do not know whether these nitrosamines, in turn, react and form other compounds, or whether they accumulate over time. If they do accumulate, this could have important implications for the epidemiology of lung cancer. NNK is a lung carcinogen that will cause tumours in the lung whether it is inhaled, injected, or ingested. If concentrations of NNK in rooms where smoking takes place build steadily over time, then this exposure may be partly responsible for the lung cancer seen in smokers and in non-smokers exposed to secondhand smoke. Nicotine can also react to form volatile compounds including formaldehyde. Both formaldehyde and NNK are known human carcinogens for which there is no safe level of exposure. 5 We also do not know what the levels of nicotine and cotinine seen in the study indicate about the level of exposure to the other components of thirdhand smoke. Most studies relating biomarkers of nicotine and nitrosamine exposure have been conducted with smokers. A recent paper by Benowitz et al demonstrated that measurement of urinary cotinine can underestimate exposure to tobacco-specific nitrosamines in non-smokers. The ratios observed between 4-(methylnitrosamino)1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL; a metabolite of the nitrosamine NNK) and cotinine in smokers were between 0.09 and 0.23. The ratios observed between NNAL and cotinine in non-smokers were between 1.10 and 5.50. This means that if urinary cotinine data from smokers is used to estimate exposure to the carcinogen NNK in non-smokers, one could underestimate their exposure by 5e60-fold. I hope that Matt et al were able to reserve portions of their samples to test for nitrosamines and nitrosamine metabolites, so we can begin to learn what the relationships are for thirdhand smoke exposure. We may not yet know whether exposure to thirdhand smoke has negative effects on health, but we do know who will be most exposed to it: poor people. In many countries, the poorer you are, the more likely you are to smoke. In the US, 31.5% of adults with incomes below the federal poverty level smoked, while only 19.6% of those above the poverty level did. Internationally, this trend holds among both men and women of highincome nations and among men in midincome and most low-income nations. Smoking rates in California are the second lowest in the US at only 13.8%, but in a recent survey of cotinine concentrations in patients admitted to the county hospital in San Francisco, which serves the poor and uninsured, 55% were either smokers or exposed to very high levels of secondhand smoke. Poor people are also more likely to be exposed to secondhand smoke. In the US, geometric mean urinary cotinine levels in children from families with a poverty level income were over five times higher than those from children from families with incomes four or more times the poverty level. Another recent study of nicotine levels in house dust found that nonsmoking households with income below the median income for the study had higher nicotine concentrations in dust than non-smoking households with income above the median. The effect of this disparity on housing stock at the low end of the price range is obvious. If the smoking rate among renters is 13.8%, then a rental home that has been occupied by five different families has a 36% chance of having been occupied by at least one smoker. If the smoking rate is 25%, then the home has a 75% chance of having been occupied by at least one smoker. The median household income of the families in this study was above the poverty level, but not far enough to allow them free choice of rental housing in San Diego County. The median income of the non-smoking households was between $33 000 and $37 200 and the median income of the smoking households was $25 500. The median household income in San Diego county is $62 820 and the median rent for a two-bedroom unit is $1324. If thirdhand smoke is a health hazard, then this exposure may University of California, San Francisco, California, USA
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Tobacco control
دوره 20 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2011