Feb 16 2010
Pipe and cigar smoke may be more harmful than once thought. While some
believe pipes and cigars are healthier than cigarettes, a major known
cause of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a new study
directly links pipe and cigar smoking to decreased lung function.
“These findings, together
with increased cotinine levels in current pipe and cigar smokers,
suggest that long-term pipe and cigar smoking may damage the lungs and
contribute to the development of COPD. Physicians should consider pipe
and cigar smoking a risk factor for COPD and counsel their patients to
quit.”
Researchers conducted a population-based study to determine whether pipe
and cigar smoking was associated with elevated cotinine levels (the end
product of tobacco, which can be detected in the urine), decrements in
lung function, and increased odds of airflow obstruction. Among 3,528
participants, those who did not smoke cigarettes but did smoke pipes or
cigars were more likely to have airflow obstruction than those who had
never smoked.
While cotinine levels among current pipe and cigar smokers were lower
than among current cigarette smokers, the relative differences in
cotinine levels may reflect differences in nicotine absorption but not
necessarily exposure to harmful products of tobacco smoke.
“Our study shows that pipe and cigar smoking is associated with
decrements in lung function that are consistent with obstructive lung
disease,” said R. Graham Barr, MD, Dr.PH, Assistant Professor of
Medicine and Assistant Professor of Epidemiology at Columbia
Presbyterian and lead author of the study. “These findings, together
with increased cotinine levels in current pipe and cigar smokers,
suggest that long-term pipe and cigar smoking may damage the lungs and
contribute to the development of COPD. Physicians should consider pipe
and cigar smoking a risk factor for COPD and counsel their patients to
quit.”
In a related editorial, Michael B. Steinberg, MD, MPH, of the University
of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Robert Wood Johnson Medical
School, stresses the importance of educating the public, and expresses
concern for the rising rate of tobacco use in the United States.
“We are now witnessing the concerning trend of increased use of other
tobacco products,” Dr. Steinberg writes. “As changes in public health
policy have made cigarette smoking less socially acceptable, a distinct
set of characteristics are associated with cigar and pipe use, such as
sophistication, affluence, education, and celebration. These images,
largely fostered by the tobacco industry, perpetuate the idea that these
products play a suitable role in our society.”