On 2017 Sep 18, Konstantinos Farsalinos commented:
Although Jensen et al. mentioned in the 2015 NEJM research letter that the health risks of formaldehyde hemiacetal inhalation are unknown ("How formaldehyde-releasing agents behave in the respiratory tract is unknown..."), they made a calculation that the formaldehyde-attributable cancer risk from e-cigarette use is 5 to 15 times higher than from long-term smoking. These two statements are clearly contradictory, and the calculation of any cancer risk from formaldehyde hemiacetal emissions is invalid since no such risk has been established for these compounds. It is simply based on an unsubstantiated assumption that "inhaling formaldehyde-releasing agents carries the same risk per unit of formaldehyde as the risk associated with inhaling gaseous formaldehyde...". Additionally, the latter statement was further misinterpreted by the media that reported the cancer risk of e-cigarettes (total risk, not formaldehyde-attributable risk) being 5 to 15 times higher than smoking. This is extremely important because, according to Fowles and Dybing (http://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/12/4/424.long), the formaldehyde-attributable cancer risk is less than 1% of the total cancer risk of smoking. Prof Peyton, one of the authors of the NEJM research letter, now claims that formaldehyde hemiacetals are different from gaseous formaldehyde. But then, why did he and his co-authors use the hemiacetal measurements to present the cancer risk of e-cigarettes relative to tobacco cigarettes, considering that literature data for gaseous formaldehyde emissions from tobacco cigarettes were used in the comparison?
In the recently published paper (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-11499-0), Salamanca et al. are comparing the results of an experimental method (NMR) with the results of an established and validated analytical method used to identify and measure aldehyde emissions. In our study, using a validated and widely accepted method, we found 89% higher levels of formaldehyde at 5 V than the level of formaldehyde hemiacetal reported by Jensen et al. in the NEJM research letter. Therefore, we did not underestimate formaldehyde levels. We did not reject the findings by Jensen et al. that, high formaldehyde levels can be produced when blindly testing e-cigarettes at inappropriately high power settings relevant to the atomizer used (in fact we found more, but in general our findings support their observations). However, this cannot be used as an indication that e-cigarette users are exposed to such extreme formaldehyde levels in their daily routine.
I would also like to remind that we used a product which is outdated and inefficiently designed, a design that has been abandoned since 2012. These products are not even available in the market in the European Union anymore. Recent atomizers release formaldehyde at levels orders of magnitude lower than the one we tested. Even if we assume, despite the lack of evidence, that formaldehyde hemiacetals carry the same health risk as formaldehyde and that DNP derivatization underestimates the total formaldehyde exposure, still e-cigarettes developed over that last 3 years (at least) emit by far lower formaldehyde than tobacco cigarettes. Finally, the comparison between tobacco and electronic cigarettes in formaldehyde emissions is based on measurements performed using the same analytical method (DNPH derivatization) for both products. The assumption about underestimation of formaldehyde by DNPH derivatization applies equally to tobacco cigarettes and electronic cigarettes (tobacco cigarettes contain a lot of PG and VG); thus the relative difference remains the same.
Recent studies have found that e-cigarettes release formaldehyde at levels corresponding to > 1900 cigarettes consumed per day (e.g. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27461870). All these studies, which have been accompanied by press statements and wide media coverage, need to be replicated under verified realistic conditions. Science is defined by replication, and we hope that journal editors will accept the challenge of publishing studies that reject findings previously reported in the same journal. In any case, all our replication studies will be published in peer-reviewed journals.
In conclusion, our purpose was to replicate an experiment using a specific e-cigarette device, atomizer and liquid under verified realistic conditions in order to verify or reject the conclusion that e-cigarettes carry 5 to 15 times the cancer risk of tobacco cigarettes. Our study clearly identified that this statement is false, and this was evident even when we used a very outdated and inefficient e-cigarette product. Therefore, our study was a valid replication experiment that presented the clinical relevance of previous findings.
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