One of the great unanswered questions for smokers who are trying to quit — and for the advocacy groups trying to help them — is whether electronic cigarettes are friends or foes.
University of Minnesota researchers aim to address that dilemma with a study examining exactly what smokers inhale when they breathe e-cigarette vapors and how "vaping" affects the body. Researchers will collect blood, urine and saliva samples from at least 25 smokers who use only e-cigarettes and at least 25 who use them with traditional cigarettes.
"The first step is to say, 'Well, how toxic are these products? What is actually in them?' " said Dorothy Hatsukami, associate director for cancer prevention and control in the U's Masonic Cancer Center.
E-cigarettes, rechargeable devices that heat liquid nicotine or other flavored substances into a vapor that the user inhales, have been marketed as a safer alternative to tobacco. Yet a lack of regulation on their manufacture and contents makes it hard to know if they're safer than traditional cigarettes and whether they can be used to safely help wean people off tobacco, Hatsukami said.
"It's like a Wild West out there," she said.
Some e-cigarettes that are promoted as nicotine-free, for example, have been found to contain the addictive substance, while others contain little or no nicotine despite claims to the contrary.
Some previous studies have chemically analyzed the contents of e-cigarettes. The Minnesota study aims to go a step further by examining how the contents of different kinds of e-cigarettes affect the body.
The market for e-cigarettes has grown rapidly — sales have doubled annually since 2008 and are expected to reach $1.6 billion this year. About 6 percent of adults have tried them, and the share of high school students who have tried them hit 10 percent last year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.