Br. Bombick et al., CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL STUDIES OF A NEW CIGARETTE THAT PRIMARILY HEATS TOBACCO - PART 2 - IN-VITRO TOXICOLOGY OF MAINSTREAM SMOKE CONDENSATE, Food and chemical toxicology, 36(3), 1998, pp. 183-190
The genotoxic and cytotoxic potential of mainstream cigarette smoke co
ndensate (CSC) from a new cigarette that primarily heats tobacco (TOB-
HT) was compared with that of CSC from a Kentucky reference low ''tar'
' cigarette (1R4F) representative of the current US cigarette market,
and Kentucky Reference 1R5F, representative of ultra-low ''tar'' cigar
ettes on the US market. TOB-HT was evaluated at concentrations which i
nduced concentration-dependent positive responses with 1R4F and 1R5F i
n, an in vitro toxicology test battery which included sister chromatid
exchange, chromosome aberration, and neutral red cytotoxicity assays
in CHO cells, and the Ames bacterial mutagenicity assay. CSC from 1R4F
and 1R5F was positive in the Ames assay with Salmonella typhimurium s
trains TA98, TA100, TA1538 and TA1537, and negative with TA1535, while
CSC from TOB-HT was negative in all five strains. CSC from 1R4F and 1
R5F cigarettes was positive in sister chromatid exchange (SCE), chromo
some aberration (CA) and neutral red cytotoxicity assays, while CSC fr
om the TOB-HT cigarette yielded negative results in all the above endp
oints. These data indicate that in these assays the genotoxic and cyto
toxic potential of CSC from the new cigarette that primarily heats tob
acco is significantly less than CSC from Kentucky reference 1R4F and 1
R5F cigarettes, which are representative of cigarettes currently sold
in the US. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.