A lower impact of an acute exposure to electronic cigarette aerosols than to cigarette smoke in human organotypic buccal and small airway cultures was demonstrated using systems toxicology assessment

In the context of tobacco harm-reduction strategy, the potential reduced impact of electronic cigarette (EC) exposure should be evaluated relative to the impact of cigarette smoke exposure. We conducted a series of in vitro studies to compare the biological impact of an acute exposure to aerosols of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Internal and emergency medicine 2019-09, Vol.14 (6), p.863-883
Hauptverfasser: Iskandar, Anita R., Zanetti, Filippo, Kondylis, Athanasios, Martin, Florian, Leroy, Patrice, Majeed, Shoaib, Steiner, Sandro, Xiang, Yang, Ortega Torres, Laura, Trivedi, Keyur, Guedj, Emmanuel, Merg, Celine, Frentzel, Stefan, Ivanov, Nikolai V., Doshi, Utkarsh, Lee, Kyeonghee Monica, McKinney, Willie J., Peitsch, Manuel C., Hoeng, Julia
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container_end_page 883
container_issue 6
container_start_page 863
container_title Internal and emergency medicine
container_volume 14
creator Iskandar, Anita R.
Zanetti, Filippo
Kondylis, Athanasios
Martin, Florian
Leroy, Patrice
Majeed, Shoaib
Steiner, Sandro
Xiang, Yang
Ortega Torres, Laura
Trivedi, Keyur
Guedj, Emmanuel
Merg, Celine
Frentzel, Stefan
Ivanov, Nikolai V.
Doshi, Utkarsh
Lee, Kyeonghee Monica
McKinney, Willie J.
Peitsch, Manuel C.
Hoeng, Julia
description In the context of tobacco harm-reduction strategy, the potential reduced impact of electronic cigarette (EC) exposure should be evaluated relative to the impact of cigarette smoke exposure. We conducted a series of in vitro studies to compare the biological impact of an acute exposure to aerosols of “test mix” (flavors, nicotine, and humectants), “base” (nicotine and humectants), and “carrier” (humectants) formulations using MarkTen ® EC devices with the impact of exposure to smoke of 3R4F reference cigarettes, at a matching puff number, using human organotypic air–liquid interface buccal and small airway cultures. We measured the concentrations of nicotine and carbonyls deposited in the exposure chamber after each exposure experiment. The deposited carbonyl concentrations were used as representative measures to assess the reduced exposure to potentially toxic volatile substances. We followed a systems toxicology approach whereby functional biological endpoints, such as histopathology and ciliary beating frequency, were complemented by multiplex and omics assays to measure secreted inflammatory proteins and whole-genome transcriptomes, respectively. Among the endpoints analyzed, the only parameters that showed a significant response to EC exposure were secretion of proteins and whole-genome transcriptomes. Based on the multiplex and omics analyzes, the cellular responses to EC aerosol exposure were tissue type-specific; however, those alterations were much smaller than those following cigarette smoke exposure, even when the EC aerosol exposure under the testing conditions resulted in a deposited nicotine concentration approximately 200 times that in saliva of EC users.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s11739-019-02055-x
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subjects Aerosols
Carbonyl compounds
Cigarette smoke
Cigarette smoking
Cigarette Smoking - metabolism
Cigarettes
E-Cigarette Vapor - analysis
E-Cigarette Vapor - metabolism
E-Cigarette Vapor - toxicity
Electronic cigarettes
Environmental Exposure - analysis
Exposure
Formulations
Genomes
Health Impact of Electronic Cigarettes and Tobacco Heating Systems
Histopathology
Humans
Im - Original
Inflammation
Internal Medicine
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Mouth Mucosa - metabolism
Mouth Mucosa - physiopathology
Nicotine
Proteins
Respiratory tract
Saliva
Secretion
Smoke
Tobacco
Tobacco smoke
Toxicology
title A lower impact of an acute exposure to electronic cigarette aerosols than to cigarette smoke in human organotypic buccal and small airway cultures was demonstrated using systems toxicology assessment
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