Pubdate: Mon, 29 May 2000 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The Toronto Star Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ Author: Tim Harper, Ottawa Bureau TOBACCO STUDIES REVEALED Canadian Firm Explored Cigarettes' Links To Cancer, Released Documents Show OTTAWA -- Canada's largest tobacco manufacturer was extensively studying the cancer-causing potential of its products for years while publicly maintaining there was no link between cigarettes and cancer, newly-released documents show. Imperial Tobacco also experimented with ways to make cigarettes safer for consumers, but there is no evidence it ever used any of the technology in the product it marketed, according to the documents. As recently as 1994, Imperial Tobacco was involved in a project researching a cigarette which was conventional in look and acceptable in taste, but lower in carcinogens while reducing sidestream smoke. Studies done in also conclusively found that cigarettes marketed as "light, ultra-light" or "mild" were more damaging to smokers because of the so-called "puff volume," industry jargon for the smoker's tendency to take deeper drags on lighter cigarettes. The documents were released by Health Canada and Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada as part of a new anti-smoking offensive launched this week. The documents are among tens of thousands of pages released from the Guildford, England, repository of Imperial's parent company, British American Tobacco. The company documents were unsealed as a part of a landmark legal settlement between U.S. cigarette makers and the state of Minnesota. That settlement was one of more than 40 lawsuits between U.S. states and cigarette makers in which the tobacco companies paid out more than $250 billion (U.S.). British American and Imperial used three different tests over 30 years to study the toxicity of various tobacco blends, including Canadian blends. Every study found some type of genetic mutation caused by cigarette smoke. The most commonly used study was known as the Ames Test in which smoke condensate was mixed with bacteria. Canadian cigarettes were the least hazardous of any of the tobacco types studied under the Ames test. Canadian Tobacco Manufacturers Council However, Canadian blends ranked at the top or near the top in toxicity in the other two studies. In one, known as mouse skin painting, mice were shaved and smoke condensate was applied to their backs and studied for two years. The condensate produced tumours on the mice. In inhalation tests, rats were forced to inhale cigarette smoke and their respiratory tracts were studied. The documents released to The Star were published in 1990, a summary of some 30 years of research. The documents indicate ventilated cigarettes, which became very popular in the 1980s, were, in fact, more dangerous to smokers' health. Public perception was just the opposite. The tobacco industry in this country has always maintained that it never marketed "light, extra-light, mild or ultra-mild" cigarettes as healthier and never made such a claim. The industry, in fact, has maintained that such brands were manufactured at the behest of the government. However, it did study the impact of colour on marketing and it sold its lighter brands in lighter "cleaner" package colours. A spokesperson for Imperial, makers of the popular Player's brand, could not be reached for comment. The documents were released as a parliamentary committee begins hearings on Health Minister Allan Rock's proposed new, stark warnings on cigarette packages. Under the plan, the packages will depict a cancerous mouth, a diseased lung, even a drooping cigarette indicating sexual dysfunction. The Canadian Tobacco Manufacturers Council has argued it will need more than the six months given by Health Canada to deal with the overhaul of the packaging of some 400 brands. "It can't be done under the government's time constraints unless we jeopardize company trademarks or do a very poor reproduction of what the government wants," said council spokesperson Marie-Josee Lapointe. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson