by Playfuls Staff |
26th September 2006

Menthol and non-menthol
cigarettes appear to be equally harmful to the arteries and to lung function,
but smokers of menthols may be less likely to attempt or succeed at quitting,
according to a report in the September 25 issue of Archives of Internal
Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. [more]
Cigarette smoking causes about
440,000 deaths in the United
States each year, according to background
information in the article. African Americans tend to smoke less than European
Americans, but have disproportionately high rates of cancer, cardiovascular
disease and other smoking-related illnesses. "For a variety of historical
and cultural reasons, including targeted advertising by the tobacco industry,
African American smokers are much more likely to smoke menthol cigarettes than
European American smokers (approximately 70 percent vs. 30 percent)," the
authors write. Menthol is a mint-flavored compound derived from peppermint oil
that could potentially increase the harm caused by cigarettes through a variety
of biological mechanisms. "If menthol cigarettes were more harmful than
non-menthol cigarettes, the higher exposure to menthol cigarette smoke among
African American smokers could help explain racial/ethnic disparities in
disease rates."
Mark J. Pletcher, M.D., M.P.H., University of California,
San Francisco,
and colleagues examined this hypothesis in 1,535 smokers who were part of the
Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study. The
researchers measured the association between exposure to menthol cigarettes and
smoking cessation (quitting); coronary calcification, or a build-up of calcium
in the arteries leading to the heart that is a sign of coronary artery disease;
and change in pulmonary (lung) function over a 10-year period. Participants
were women and men age 18 to 30 at the beginning of the study, in 1985. Each
underwent a medical examination and answered questions about demographics and
smoking habits in 1985 and again two, five, seven, 10 and 15 years later.
Among the smokers, 808 were women
and 727 men. In 1985, 972 (63 percent) preferred menthol cigarettes and 563 (36
percent) preferred non-menthol cigarettes; 89 percent of African Americans,
compared with 29 percent of European Americans, smoked menthol cigarettes.
Menthol smokers were also more likely to be younger, female and unemployed, to
have a lower level of education and a higher body mass index, and to drink less
alcohol and smoke fewer cigarettes per day.
Those who smoked menthol
cigarettes in 1985 were more likely to still be smoking at follow-up
examinations--in 2000, for example, 69 percent were still smokers vs. 54
percent of non-menthol smokers. However, once the researchers factored in other
social and demographic variables, most of this difference was explained by the
fact that African Americans were both more likely to smoke menthols and less
likely to quit smoking. "Among smokers who tried to quit, menthol seemed
unrelated to quitting, but menthol was associated with a lower likelihood of
trying to quit in the first place," the authors write. Analyzing the data
over time, they found that menthol smokers were almost twice as likely to
relapse after quitting and also were less likely to stop for a sustained period
of time. Both coronary calcification and a decline in lung function over 10
years were associated with the number of cigarettes smoked, but whether the
cigarettes were menthol or not did not appear to make a difference.
"Mentholation of cigarettes
does not seem to explain disparities in ischemic heart disease and obstructive
pulmonary disease between African Americans and European Americans in the United States
but may partially explain lower rates of smoking cessation among African
American smokers," the authors conclude. "It is possible, therefore,
that switching from menthol cigarettes to non-menthol cigarettes might
facilitate subsequent smoking cessation, especially in African Americans, and
thereby reduce tobacco-related health disparities."