학술논문

Emerging ENDS products and challenges in tobacco control toxicity research
Document Type
article
Source
Tobacco Control. 33(1)
Subject
Medical Biotechnology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Tobacco
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Behavioral and Social Science
Cancer
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Humans
Nicotine
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems
Tobacco Control
Flavoring Agents
Tobacco Products
electronic nicotine delivery devices
nicotine
environment
public policy
tobacco industry
Public Health
Language
Abstract
Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) continue to rapidly evolve. Current products pose unique challenges and opportunities for researchers and regulators. This commentary aims to highlight research gaps, particularly in toxicity research, and provide guidance on priority research questions for the tobacco regulatory community. Disposable flavoured ENDS have become the most popular device class among youth and may contain higher nicotine levels than JUUL devices. They also exhibit enhanced harmful and potentially harmful constituents production, contain elevated levels of synthetic coolants and pose environmental concerns. Synthetic nicotine and flavour capsules are innovations that have recently enabled the circumvention of Food and Drug Administration oversight. Coil-less ENDS offer the promise of delivering fewer toxicants due to the absence of heating coils, but initial studies show that these products exhibit similar toxicological profiles compared with JUULs. Each of these topic areas requires further research to understand and mitigate their impact on human health, especially their risks to young users.