The US Food and Drug Administration has proposed lowering the nicotine content of cigarettes to a minimally addictive level to increase smoking cessation and reduce initiation. This study has two aims: 1) to determine when cigarette manufacturers had the technical capability to reduce cigarette nicotine content; and 2) to estimate the lost public health benefits of implementing a standard in 1965, 1975, or 1985.
To determine the technical capability of cigarette companies, we reviewed public patents and internal cigarette company business records using the Truth Tobacco Industry Documents. To evaluate the impact of a very low nicotine content cigarette (VLNC) standard on smoking attributable deaths (SADs) and life years lost (LYLs), we applied a validated (CISNET) model that uses past smoking data, along with estimates of the potential impact of VLNCs derived from expert elicitation.
Cigarette manufacturers recognized that cigarettes were deadly and addictive before 1964. Manufacturers have had the technical capability to lower cigarette nicotine content for decades. Our model projected that a standard implemented in 1965 could have averted 21 million SADs (54% reduction) and 272 million LYLs (64% reduction) from 1965-2064, a standard implemented in 1975 could have averted 18.9 million SADs and 245.4 million LYLs from 1975-2074, and a standard implemented in 1985 could have averted 16.3 million SADs and 211.5 million LYLs from 1985-2084.
Millions of premature deaths could have been averted if companies had only sold VLNCs decades ago. FDA should act immediately to implement a VLNC standard.