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Bubble Pop? Brownie Batter? Vapes鈥 Added Flavors Fuel E-Cig Debate

A heated debate is redrawing alliances in the tobacco control movement as federal officials wrestle with how to regulate the growing e-cigarette market.

The players include researchers, smoking-cessation advocates and 鈥渧aping鈥 connoisseurs.

鈥淚t鈥檚 become very divisive in a community that was largely united against Big Tobacco,鈥 said Samir Soneji, an associate professor at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, who researches tobacco control policy.

The took a preliminary step in March, seeking public input on what flavors could be added to battery-powered nicotine devices, which can taste like cinnamon rolls or strawberry milkshakes. E-cigs do not contain tobacco.

The comment period, which so far has generated more than 16,000 statements, will close on June 19. But many bureaucratic hurdles remain before a final rule will be issued.

One school of thought argues that e-cigarettes 鈥 specifically ones that taste good 鈥 help people quit tobacco.

But opponents maintain there is little evidence 鈥 especially from studies done on large groups of people 鈥 to support this idea.

Critics emphasize the risks to adolescents, who for years have heard anti-tobacco messages highlighting cigarettes鈥 unappealing taste and smell. Sugary vaping flavors bypass this argument and lead some parents to worry these products are a to 鈥 even though selling to minors is illegal.

The limited data make regulation tricky, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb told Kaiser Health News. The agency may end up commissioning new research before developing policy.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of interest in this subject,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he question is how much of that will be scientific, that can inform our rule-making.鈥

Further complicating the picture, skeptics argue, is Big Tobacco鈥檚 looming presence.

Though the market鈥檚 biggest player, Juul Labs, is an independent company, tobacco companies also are betting big on e-cigarettes to boost their long-term financial picture.

Industry analysts project this market could be worth worldwide by 2023.

Already, companies such as Altria, Reynolds American and Japan Tobacco International (JTI) are marketing e-cig products and flexing their political muscle.

A Reynolds subsidiary is to block a San Francisco ban on flavored smoking products, which would affect e-cigs and menthol cigarettes. Altria and Reynolds together have spent lobbying Congress about e-cigarette regulation.

鈥淭hey have a lot of influence. They can use what they鈥檝e learned over decades of successful marketing,鈥 Soneji said.

When contacted, JTI and Altria opted not to comment on e-cig regulations until their complete responses were filed with the FDA.

Michele Maron, a JTI spokeswoman, said the company supports 鈥渞esponsible use of flavors鈥 and will 鈥渃ontinue to defend the rights of informed adults to choose legal tobacco products鈥 but opposes sales to minors.

An Altria spokesman suggested consulting the company鈥檚 , which emphasizes support for responsible packaging, labeling and marketing of products

Reynolds declined to comment.

Meanwhile, Tony Abboud, executive director of the Vapor Technology Association (VTA), a trade organization, said the landscape has changed.

Tobacco companies are 鈥渘ow examining how to develop products that will make their own cigarettes obsolete,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ne could argue that is a huge net benefit.鈥

The Debate

E-cigarettes are electronic, handheld devices that deliver a vapor made of nicotine and other chemicals.

Since entering the U.S. market in 2007, they have amassed a substantial following.

About 3.2 percent of adults used e-cigarettes in 2016, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

That same year, American middle- and high-school students used an e-cigarette within 30 days of being surveyed, according to the CDC.

Even though vapes don鈥檛 burn tobacco, they, along with other 鈥渆lectronic nicotine delivery systems,鈥 are regulated by the FDA because of a federal rule finalized in 2016.

The and the say the cancer risk is lower than that of cigarettes, but vaping has been linked to other ailments, such as emphysema and heart conditions.

Nicotine鈥檚 long-term effects aren鈥檛 well-known, but it can impair brain development in adolescents. New that flavoring chemicals may also be harmful.

Mark Anton, executive director of the Smoke-Free Alternatives Trade Association, another industry group, dismissed these concerns.

鈥淭he evidence [of harm to teens] 鈥 is highly anecdotal,鈥 he said.

And, at least in testimonials, there鈥檚 increasing traction for vapes鈥 smoking-cessation potential.

鈥淚f it were not for the flavors in e-liquids, I would still be smoking a pack a day of cigarettes,鈥 submitted to the FDA.

from someone claiming to have smoked for 15 years, said, 鈥渇lavors were instrumental in converting [me] into a nonsmoker.鈥

The tobacco industry has a history of leveraging customer loyalty, mobilizing a vocal support base, said Pamela Ling, a professor of medicine at the University of California-San Francisco, who studies tobacco and its marketing.

鈥淚鈥檓 not saying everyone who makes a comment is funded by the tobacco industry,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut they are a very well-funded interest who know how this process works, and know how to affect it.鈥

Negotiating Trade-Offs

Testimonials aside, it鈥檚 unclear whether e-cigarettes are more effective tools to quit smoking than the nicotine patch or drugs like Wellbutrin. It鈥檚 also unclear whether flavors help.

鈥淭he evidence is really limited,鈥 Ling said.

Many adults smokers don鈥檛 actually quit tobacco but use vapes in places where cigarettes are banned, said John Pierce, a professor for cancer research at the University of California-San Diego.

In fact, e-cigarettes are not an FDA-certified smoking cessation therapy. The industry has not sought this label, and the VTA doesn鈥檛 intend to change that, Abboud said. Certification requires rigorously demonstrating e-cigs鈥 effectiveness 鈥 and showing that the benefits outweigh risks.

Meanwhile, vaping鈥檚 popularity among .

鈥淚t鈥檚 a double-edged sword in some ways,鈥 Gottlieb said. 鈥淔lavors in this context could do both harm and good.鈥

For example, e-cigarette marketing, which isn鈥檛 regulated as strictly as conventional cigarette marketing, may work especially well on young adults.

suggests that sweeter flavors 鈥 think peanut butter cup or gummy bear 鈥 disproportionately attract young people. (The those findings. Abboud said his organization supports stricter marketing standards.)

That underscores this debate鈥檚 central question: Are potential benefits for adults worth the risks for children?

Tobacco researchers such as Stanton Glantz, at the University of California-San Francisco, say the risks 鈥 and limited favorable evidence 鈥 support keeping flavored vapes off the market until science clearly supports their use for smoking cessation.

But analysts such as Kenneth Warner, a public health professor and economist at the University of Michigan, focus on how vaping could lower adult tobacco use.

鈥淭he FDA is 鈥 asking for a level of proof about its public health effects that鈥檚 probably unattainable,鈥 he added. 鈥淚鈥檓 sympathetic about worrying about the impact on kids. I just don鈥檛 want to throw out the baby with the bathwater.鈥

The ideal standard, Gottlieb said, would ban flavors that appeal to kids, while permitting adult-friendly ones. That鈥檚 easier said than done.

Meanwhile, the current American 鈥 articulated in January by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine 鈥 included both of these ideas and called for more research.

That last point is essential, Gottlieb suggested.

鈥淭hat rule-making we do needs to be informed by data,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e a science-based organization. We want to get it right.鈥

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