Smokeless tobacco

{{short description|Tobacco product used by means other than smoking}}

{{see also|Herbal smokeless tobacco}}

{{Missing information|the history and public perception of smokeless tobacco products|date=October 2023}}

File:Schnupfer_corrected.jpg using his thumb and forefinger]]

Smokeless tobacco is a tobacco product that is used by means other than smoking. Their use involves chewing, sniffing, or placing the product between gum and the cheek or lip. Smokeless tobacco products are produced in various forms, such as chewing tobacco, snuff, snus, and dissolvable tobacco products.{{cite journal|last1=Czoli|first1=Christine D|last2=Fong|first2=Geoffrey T|last3=Mays|first3=Darren|last4=Hammond|first4=David|title=How do consumers perceive differences in risk across nicotine products? A review of relative risk perceptions across smokeless tobacco, e-cigarettes, nicotine replacement therapy and combustible cigarettes|journal=Tobacco Control|volume=26|issue=e1|year=2016|pages=tobaccocontrol–2016–053060|issn=0964-4563|doi=10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2016-053060|pmid=27625408|s2cid=3367137}} Smokeless tobacco is widely used in South Asia and this accounts for about 80% of global consumption.{{Cite web |last=Smokeless tobacco |first=South Asia |title=Smokeless tobacco use in South Asia |url=https://cdn.who.int/media/docs/default-source/searo/tobacco/smokeless-tobacco--an-epidemic-in-the-south-east-asia-region.pdf?sfvrsn=77450acb_3}} All smokeless tobacco products contain nicotine{{cite journal |last1=Drope |first1=Jeffrey |last2=Cahn |first2=Zachary |last3=Kennedy |first3=Rosemary |last4=Liber |first4=Alex C. |last5=Stoklosa |first5=Michal |last6=Henson |first6=Rosemarie |last7=Douglas |first7=Clifford E. |last8=Drope |first8=Jacqui |year=2017 |title=Key issues surrounding the health impacts of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) and other sources of nicotine |journal=CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians |volume=67 |issue=6 |pages=449–471 |doi=10.3322/caac.21413 |issn=0007-9235 |pmid=28961314 |doi-access=free}} and are therefore highly addictive.{{cite journal |last1=Vidyasagaran |first1=A. L. |last2=Siddiqi |first2=K. |last3=Kanaan |first3=M. |year=2016 |title=Use of smokeless tobacco and risk of cardiovascular disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis |url=http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/101100/1/EJPC_D_16_00085_R1_2016.pdf |journal=European Journal of Preventive Cardiology |volume=23 |issue=18 |pages=1970–1981 |doi=10.1177/2047487316654026 |issn=2047-4873 |pmid=27256827 |s2cid=206820997}} Quitting smokeless tobacco use is as challenging as smoking cessation.

Using smokeless tobacco can cause various harmful effects such as dental disease, oral cancer, oesophagus cancer, and pancreas cancer, coronary heart disease, as well as negative reproductive effects including stillbirth, premature birth and low birth weight.{{Cite journal |last1=Gupta |first1=Ruchika |last2=Gupta |first2=Sanjay |last3=Sharma |first3=Shashi |last4=Sinha |first4=Dhirendra N |last5=Mehrotra |first5=Ravi |date=2019-01-01 |title=Risk of Coronary Heart Disease Among Smokeless Tobacco Users: Results of Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Global Data |url=https://academic.oup.com/ntr/article/21/1/25/4793346 |journal=Nicotine & Tobacco Research |language=en |volume=21 |issue=1 |pages=25–31 |doi=10.1093/ntr/nty002 |issn=1469-994X |pmc=6941711 |pmid=29325111}} Smokeless tobacco poses a lower health risk than traditional combusted products.{{Cite journal |last1=Hajat |first1=C. |last2=Stein |first2=E. |last3=Ramstrom |first3=L. |last4=Shantikumar |first4=S. |last5=Polosa |first5=R. |date=4 December 2021 |title=The health impact of smokeless tobacco products: a systematic review |journal=Harm Reduction Journal |language=en |volume=18 |issue=1 |page=123 |doi=10.1186/s12954-021-00557-6 |doi-access=free |issn=1477-7517 |pmc=8643012 |pmid=34863207}} However it is not a healthy alternative to cigarette smoking. The level of risk varies between different types of products (e.g., low nitrosamine Swedish-type snus versus other smokeless tobacco with high nitrosamine levels) and producing regions.{{cite journal|last1=Abrams|first1=David B.|last2=Glasser|first2=Allison M.|last3=Pearson|first3=Jennifer L.|last4=Villanti|first4=Andrea C.|last5=Collins|first5=Lauren K.|last6=Niaura|first6=Raymond S.|title=Harm Minimization and Tobacco Control: Reframing Societal Views of Nicotine Use to Rapidly Save Lives|journal=Annual Review of Public Health|volume=39|issue=1|year=2018|pages=193–213|issn=0163-7525|doi=10.1146/annurev-publhealth-040617-013849| doi-access=free|pmid=29323611|pmc=6942997}}{{CC-notice|cc=by4|url=https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/pdf/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-040617-013849|author(s)=David B. Abrams, Allison M. Glasser, Jennifer L. Pearson, Andrea C. Villanti, Lauren K. Collins, and Raymond S. Niaura}} There is no safe level of smokeless tobacco use. Globally it contributes to 650 000 deaths each year.

Smokeless tobacco products typically contain over 3000 constituents,{{cite journal |last1=Lauterstein |first1=Dana |last2=Hoshino |first2=Risa |last3=Gordon |first3=Terry |last4=Watkins |first4=Beverly-Xaviera |last5=Weitzman |first5=Michael |last6=Zelikoff |first6=Judith |year=2014 |title=The Changing Face of Tobacco Use Among United States Youth |journal=Current Drug Abuse Reviews |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=29–43 |doi=10.2174/1874473707666141015220110 |issn=1874-4737 |pmc=4469045 |pmid=25323124}} which includes multiple cancer-causing chemicals. Approximately 28 chemical constituents present in smokeless tobacco can cause cancer, among which nitrosamine is the most prominent.{{cite journal |last1=Niaz |first1=Kamal |last2=Maqbool |first2=Faheem |last3=Khan |first3=Fazlullah |last4=Bahadar |first4=Haji |last5=Ismail Hassan |first5=Fatima |last6=Abdollahi |first6=Mohammad |year=2017 |title=Smokeless tobacco (paan and gutkha) consumption, prevalence, and contribution to oral cancer |journal=Epidemiology and Health |volume=39 |pages=e2017009 |doi=10.4178/epih.e2017009 |issn=2092-7193 |pmc=5543298 |pmid=28292008}}{{CC-notice|cc=by4|url=https://www.e-epih.org/journal/view.php?doi=10.4178/epih.e2017009|author(s)=Kamal Niaz, Faheem Maqbool, Fazlullah Khan, Haji Bahadar, Fatima Ismail Hassan, Mohammad Abdollahi}}

Smokeless tobacco consumption is widespread throughout the world. Once addicted to nicotine from smokeless tobacco use, many people, particularly young people, expand their tobacco use by smoking cigarettes. Males are more likely than females to use smokeless tobacco.

Types

{{see also|List of tobacco products}}

File:Fred Ott Sneeze 1894 remastered.webm of Fred Ott taking a snuff and then sneezing, taken by Thomas Edison's laboratory]]

File:Dipping tobacco in mouth.jpg is placed between the lip and the gum (sublabial administration).]]

Most smokeless tobacco use involves placing the product between the gum and the cheek or lip. Smokeless tobacco is a noncombustible tobacco product.{{cite web|url=https://www.fda.gov/TobaccoProducts/Labeling/ProductsIngredientsComponents/ucm482582.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160524211807/http://www.fda.gov/TobaccoProducts/Labeling/ProductsIngredientsComponents/ucm482582.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 24, 2016|title=Smokeless Tobacco Products, Including Dip, Snuff, Snus, and Chewing Tobacco|publisher=United States Food and Drug Administration|date=7 May 2018}}{{PD-notice}}

Types of smokeless tobacco include:

  • Mixed routes of administration:
  • Kuber, a smokeless tobacco product known for its highly addictive properties and its unique presentation disguised as a mouth freshener. Users commonly add it to tea or consume it directly by placing a pinch under the lower lip.{{cite news |last1=Kinyanjui |first1=Maureen |title='Kuber is killing families!' Concerned Alai warns government |url=https://mpasho.co.ke/news/2023-05-22-kuber-is-killing-families-concerned-alai-warns-government/ |access-date=27 December 2023 |work=Mpasho |date=22 May 2023}}
  • Nasal administration:
  • Snuff, a type of tobacco that is inhaled or "snuffed" into the nasal cavity. Traditionally, a specialized tool called a snuff spoon was used for this purpose. However, modern users may simply pinch the snuff between their thumb and forefinger or use pre-measured packets.
  • Oral (buccal, sublabial, or sublingual):
  • Chewing tobacco, a type of tobacco that is chewed
  • Creamy snuff, a fluid tobacco mixture marketed as a dental hygiene aid, albeit used for recreation
  • Dipping tobacco, a type of tobacco that is placed between the lower or upper lip and gums. This form of tobacco (Hindi: Khaini) is commonly used in Indian subcontinent.{{Cite web |title=Smokeless tobacco (SLT) products |url=https://extranet.who.int/fctcapps/fctcapps/fctc/kh/slt/news/smokeless-tobacco-slt-products |access-date=2024-02-23 |website=extranet.who.int}} It is the second most common form of tobacco consumption in India, after cigarrette smoking.{{Cite journal |last1=Saddichha |first1=Sahoo |last2=Khess |first2=Christoday Raja Jayant |date=January 2010 |title=Prevalence of tobacco use among young adult males in India: a community-based epidemiological study |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20141401/ |journal=The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=73–77 |doi=10.3109/00952990903575814 |issn=1097-9891 |pmid=20141401}}
  • Dissolvable tobacco, a variation on chewing tobacco that completely dissolves in the mouth
  • Gutka, a mixture of tobacco, areca nut, and various flavoring sold in South Asia
  • Iqmik, an Alaskan tobacco product which also contains punk ash
  • Naswar, an Afghan tobacco product similar to dipping tobacco
  • Pituri, a nicotine-containing substance traditionally made from Australian tobacco plants, used by Indigenous Australians for chewing and placed between the lower lip and gums. They use it in high doses to induce stupor or trance.{{Cite journal|title = The pituri story: a review of the historical literature surrounding traditional Australian Aboriginal use of nicotine in Central Australia.|last1 = Ratsch|first1 = A|date = 2010|journal = Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine|doi = 10.1186/1746-4269-6-26|pmid = 20831827|last2 = Steadman|first2 = KJ|first3 = F|last3 = Bogossian|pmc=2944156|volume=6|pages=26 | doi-access=free }}
  • Snus, similar to dipping tobacco although the tobacco is placed under the upper lip and there is no need for spitting
  • Tobacco chewing gum, a kind of chewing gum containing tobacco
  • Toombak and shammah, preparations found in North Africa, East Africa, and the Arabian peninsula
  • Topical:
  • Topical tobacco paste, a paste applied to the skin and absorbed through the dermis

Since there are varied manufacturing methods, products can differ greatly in chemical arrangement and nicotine level.{{cite journal|last1=Cervellin|first1=Gianfranco|last2=Borghi|first2=Loris|last3=Mattiuzzi|first3=Camilla|last4=Meschi|first4=Tiziana|last5=Favaloro|first5=Emmanuel|last6=Lippi|first6=Giuseppe|title=E-Cigarettes and Cardiovascular Risk: Beyond Science and Mysticism|journal=Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis|volume=40|issue=1|year=2013|pages=060–065|issn=0094-6176|doi=10.1055/s-0033-1363468|pmid=24343348|doi-access=free}} Smokeless tobacco products typically contain over 3000 constituents which play a part in their taste as well as scent.

=Nicotine levels=

Smokeless tobacco differs depending on the type of product, the types of tobacco used, and the amount of each tobacco type used within a product. Each variable results in different level of nicotine. Furthermore, nicotine is absorbed by the body to different degrees depending on the pH level of the product, which is known as the free nicotine or unionized nicotine level.{{citation needed|date=October 2021}}

Below are some measured nicotine levels of various smokeless tobacco products from 2006 and 2007 and their corresponding free nicotine levels as calculated by the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation.{{cite journal | author = Borgerding M F, Bodnar J A, Curtin, Swauger | year = 2012 | title = The chemical composition of smokeless tobacco: A survey of products sold in the United States in 2006 and 2007 | journal = Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | volume = 64 | issue = 3| pages = 367–387 | doi = 10.1016/j.yrtph.2012.09.003 | pmid = 23000415 }}

class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"

! Product

! Nicotine (mg/g)

! Free Nicotine (mg/g)

! Free Nicotine (% of total nicotine)

! pH

! Type

! Form

! Year

Ariva3.900.7017.957.36dissolvable, drypieces2007
Stonewall Natural8.191.1714.237.24dissolvable, drypieces2007
Beech-nut Chewing Tobacco7.070.020.355.56loose leafloose2006
Hawken Wintergreen2.920.010.225.37loose leafcut2007
Lancaster Premium Chewing Tobacco8.010.010.115.05loose leafloose2007
Levi Garrett Chewing Tobacco5.340.061.196.10loose leafloose2006
Red Man Chewing Tobacco8.580.080.885.97loose leafloose2006
Red Man Golden Chewing Tobacco7.700.060.725.88loose leafloose2006
Stoker Chew Apple Chewing Tobacco3.770.010.225.37loose leafloose2007
Taylor's Pride6.430.060.905.98plugone cut2006
Catch Dry Eucalyptus15.931.398.727.00snuff, drypouch2006
Catch Dry Licorice16.700.684.096.65snuff, drypouch2006
Skoal Dry11.912.3920.087.42snuff, drypouch2007
Taboka16.730.362.146.36snuff, drypouch2007
Taboka Green13.010.483.666.60snuff, drypouch2007
Bruton Scotch Snuff17.490.492.806.48snuff, drypowder2006
Dental Sweet Snuff11.140.131.196.10snuff, drypowder2006
Levi Garrett Snuff16.600.070.425.65snuff, drypowder2007
Railroad Mills Plain Scotch Snuff23.130.482.096.35snuff, drypowder2007
Red Seal Sweet Snuff15.080.402.626.45snuff, drypowder2007
Camel Frost13.254.7035.467.76snuff, moistpouch2006
Camel Frost14.104.7133.397.72snuff, moistpouch2007
Camel Original13.874.7033.907.73snuff, moistpouch2006
Camel Original13.496.2045.987.95snuff, moistpouch2007
Camel Spice13.166.6550.588.03snuff, moistpouch2006
Camel Spice13.166.6550.588.03snuff, moistpouch2007
Cooper Long Cut Wintergreen7.971.0913.687.22snuff, moistlong cut2007
Copenhagen12.683.2125.317.55snuff, moistfine cut2006
Copenhagen Long Cut13.915.3838.697.82snuff, moistlong cut2006
Copenhagen Pouches11.216.8160.778.21snuff, moistfine cut2006
General Loose7.151.8726.197.57snuff, moistcoarse2006
General Original Portion8.465.1060.228.20snuff, moistpouch2006
General White Portion7.924.8160.778.21snuff, moistpouch2006
Grizzly Long Cut Wintergreen10.296.5964.018.27snuff, moistlong cut2006
Grizzly Long Cut Wintergreen11.205.8652.308.06snuff, moistlong cut2007
Husky Fine Cut Natural12.864.7737.067.79snuff, moistfine cut2007
Kayak Long Cut Wintergreen11.882.2618.997.39snuff, moistlong cut2007
Kodiak Premium Wintergreen10.936.5259.668.19snuff, moistlong cut2006
Kodiak Premium Wintergreen10.708.1876.398.53snuff, moistlong cut2007
Longhorn Long Cut Wintergreen13.795.7241.457.87snuff, moistlong cut2007
Red Seal Fine Cut Natural13.173.1123.617.51snuff, moistfine cut2007
Renegades Wintergreen13.362.4017.957.36snuff, moistpouch2007
Skoal Fine Cut Original13.313.8528.957.63snuff, moistfine cut2006
Skoal Long Cut Cherry12.701.6713.157.20snuff, moistlong cut2006
Skoal Long Cut Mint12.933.6828.477.62snuff, moistlong cut2006
Skoal Long Cut Straight13.373.9429.427.64snuff, moistlong cut2006
Skoal Long Cut Wintergreen12.842.8722.387.48snuff, moistlong cut2006
Timberwolf Long Cut Wintergreen14.135.1636.537.78snuff, moistlong cut2007

Health effects

Various national and international health organizations, including the World Health Organization, the US National Cancer Institute, the UK Royal College of Physicians, stated that, even if it is less dangerous than smoking, using smokeless tobacco is addictive, represents a major health risk, has no safe level use and is not a safe substitute for smoking.{{cite web |year=2017 |title=Recommendation on smokeless tobacco products |url=http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/42658/1/9241590556.pdf |publisher=World Health Organization |pages=1–9}}{{cite web |date=13 November 2015 |title=Health Risks of Smokeless Tobacco |url=https://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancer-causes/tobacco-and-cancer/smokeless-tobacco.html |publisher=American Cancer Society}}{{cite web |date=25 October 2010 |title=Smokeless Tobacco and Cancer |url=https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/tobacco/smokeless-fact-sheet |publisher=United States Department of Health and Human Services |agency=National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health}}{{PD-notice}}{{cite book |author=Royal College of Physicians of London. Tobacco Advisory Group |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fpUgCBGb5SwC&pg=PA5 |title=Protecting Smokers, Saving Lives: The Case for a Tobacco and Nicotine Regulatory Authority |publisher=Royal College of Physicians |year=2002 |isbn=978-1-86016-177-3 |pages=5–}}

Using smokeless tobacco can cause a number of adverse health effects such as dental disease, oral cancer, oesophagus cancer, and pancreatic cancer, cardiovascular disease, asthma, and deformities in the female reproductive system. It also raises the risk of fatal coronary artery disease, fatal stroke and non-fatal ischaemic heart disease

Globally it contributes to 650 000 deaths each year with a significant proportion of them in Southeast Asia.{{cite journal |last1=Sinha |first1=Dhirendra N |last2=Suliankatchi |first2=Rizwan A |last3=Gupta |first3=Prakash C |last4=Thamarangsi |first4=Thaksaphon |last5=Agarwal |first5=Naveen |last6=Parascandola |first6=Mark |last7=Mehrotra |first7=Ravi |year=2016 |title=Global burden of all-cause and cause-specific mortality due to smokeless tobacco use: systematic review and meta-analysis |journal=Tobacco Control |volume=27 |issue=1 |pages=tobaccocontrol–2016–053302 |doi=10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2016-053302 |issn=0964-4563 |pmid=27903956 |s2cid=10968200}}

= Smoking cessation and harm reduction =

Quitting smokeless tobacco use is as challenging as smoking cessation. There is no scientific evidence that using smokeless tobacco can help a person quit smoking.{{Cite web |last=ERS |date=2019-05-29 |title=ERS Position Paper on Tobacco Harm Reduction |url=https://www.ersnet.org/news-and-features/news/ers-position-paper-on-tobacco-harm-reduction-2/ |access-date=2024-05-30 |website=ERS - European Respiratory Society |language=en-GB}}

It is not recommended to use any smokeless tobacco product as part of a harm reduction strategy. Tobacco companies that sell smokeless tobacco products promote them as harm reduction products and a less harmful substitute to cigarettes.{{cite journal |last1=Gupta |first1=Alpana K. |last2=Tulsyan |first2=Sonam |last3=Bharadwaj |first3=Mausumi |last4=Mehrotra |first4=Ravi |year=2019 |title=Grass roots approach to control levels of carcinogenic nitrosamines, NNN and NNK in smokeless tobacco products |journal=Food and Chemical Toxicology |volume=124 |pages=359–366 |doi=10.1016/j.fct.2018.12.011 |issn=0278-6915 |pmid=30543893 |s2cid=56485210}} This creates a false perception of safety while real risk reduction can be achieved by smoking less.

= Safety =

File:Theo Cope 121610.jpg with a warning label]]

Smokeless tobacco products vary extensively worldwide in both form and health hazards. The level of health risk varies between different types of products (e.g., low nitrosamine Swedish-type snus versus other smokeless tobacco with high nitrosamine levels from South Asia).

Even though smokeless tobacco poses a lower health risk than traditional combusted products, contrary to common belief it is not a "safe" alternative to conventional tobacco.{{cite journal |vauthors=Christen AG, McDonald JL, Olson BL, Christen JA |title=Smokeless tobacco addiction: a threat to the oral and systemic health of the child and adolescent |journal=Pediatrician |volume=16 |issue=3-4 |pages=170–7 |date=1989 |pmid=2692003 |doi= |type=Review}} There is no safe level of smokeless tobacco use.

The declines in smokeless tobacco initiation among adolescents and young adults is particularly relevant to improving their health because smokeless tobacco use is often linked to subsequent cigarette initiation. Smokeless tobacco users can experience negative health consequences at any age.{{cite journal|last1=Lipari|first1=R. N|last2=Van Horn|first2=S. L|title=Trends in Smokeless Tobacco Use and Initiation: 2002 to 2014|publisher=Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration|date=31 May 2017|pmid=28636307}}{{PD-notice}} Youth use of tobacco in any form is unsafe.{{cite web|url=https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/youth_data/tobacco_use/index.htm|title=Youth and Tobacco Use|publisher=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention|date=20 September 2017}}{{PD-notice}}

= Cancer =

File:Tobacco cancer.png report entitled Smokeless Tobacco: Health Effects|alt=Graphic from the 2016 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report entitled Smokeless Tobacco: Health Effects. The text states, "Smokeless tobacco, like chew and dip, can cause CANCER of the MOUTH, ESOPHAGUS, AND PANCREAS."]]

Smokeless tobacco (including products where tobacco is chewed) is a cause of oral cancer, oesophagus cancer, and pancreas cancer. Increased risk of oral cancer caused by smokeless tobacco is present in countries such as the United States but particularly prevalent in Southeast Asian countries where the use of smokeless tobacco is common.{{cite journal |vauthors=Aupérin A |date=May 2020 |title=Epidemiology of head and neck cancers: an update |journal=Current Opinion in Oncology |volume=32 |issue=3 |pages=178–186 |doi=10.1097/CCO.0000000000000629 |pmid=32209823 |s2cid=214644380}}{{cite journal |display-authors=6 |vauthors=Wyss AB, Hashibe M, Lee YA, Chuang SC, Muscat J, Chen C, Schwartz SM, Smith E, Zhang ZF, Morgenstern H, Wei Q, Li G, Kelsey KT, McClean M, Winn DM, Schantz S, Yu GP, Gillison ML, Zevallos JP, Boffetta P, Olshan AF |date=November 2016 |title=Smokeless Tobacco Use and the Risk of Head and Neck Cancer: Pooled Analysis of US Studies in the INHANCE Consortium |journal=American Journal of Epidemiology |volume=184 |issue=10 |pages=703–716 |doi=10.1093/aje/kww075 |pmc=5141945 |pmid=27744388}}

Smokeless tobacco can cause white or gray patches inside the mouth (leukoplakia) that can develop into oral cancer.

== Carcinogens ==

All tobacco products, including smokeless, contain cancer-causing chemicals. These carcinogenic compounds occurring in smokeless tobacco vary widely, and depend upon the kind of product and how it was manufactured. There are 28 known cancer-causing substances in smokeless tobacco products.

Carcinogenic compounds in smokeless tobacco belong primarily to three groups of compounds: tobacco-specific nitrosamines (TSNA), N-nitrosoamino acids and N-nitrosamines. Among these TSNAs are the most abundant in smokeless tobacco and the most carcinogenic. N-nitrosonornicotine and ketone are group 1 carcinogens to humans. These two nitrosamines found in smokeless tobacco products are the main agents for the majority of cancers in smokeless tobacco users.

Products such as 3-(methylnitrosamino)-proprionitrile, nitrosamines, and nicotine initiate the production of reactive oxygen species in smokeless tobacco, eventually leading to fibroblast, DNA, and RNA damage with carcinogenic effects in the mouth of tobacco consumers. The metabolic activation of nitrosamine in tobacco by cytochrome P450 enzymes may lead to the formation of N-nitrosonornicotine, a major carcinogen, and micronuclei, which are an indicator of genotoxicity. These effects lead to further DNA damage and, eventually, oral cancer.

Other chemicals found in tobacco can also cause cancer. These include the radioactive element polonium-210 found in tobacco fertilizer. Harmful chemicals are also formed when tobacco is cured with heat (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons). Furthermore tobacco contains harmful metals such as arsenic, beryllium, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, lead, nickel, and mercury.

The amounts of nicotine in saliva from using smokeless tobacco could be at amounts that can be toxic to cells in the oral cavity.{{cite journal |last1=Holliday |first1=Richard S |last2=Campbell |first2=James |last3=Preshaw |first3=Philip M. |year=2019 |title=Effect of nicotine on human gingival, periodontal ligament and oral epithelial cells. A systematic review of the literature |journal=Journal of Dentistry |volume=86 |pages=81–88 |doi=10.1016/j.jdent.2019.05.030 |issn=0300-5712 |pmid=31136818 |s2cid=169035502}}

= Cardiovascular disease =

Using smokeless tobacco increases the risk of fatal coronary heart disease and stroke. Use of smokeless tobacco also seems to greatly raise the risk of non-fatal ischaemic heart disease among users in Asia, although not in Europe.

= Effects during pregnancy =

Smokeless tobacco can cause adverse reproductive effects including stillbirth, premature birth, low birth weight. Nicotine in smokeless tobacco products that are used during pregnancy can affect how a baby's brain develops before birth.{{cite web|url=https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/smokeless/health_effects/index.htm|title=Smokeless Tobacco: Health Effects|publisher=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention|date=1 December 2016}}{{PD-notice}}

Management

Due to the harm caused by smokeless tobacco, it use might lead to the need for management or treatment. Some medications that show some benefits are varenicline and nicotine lozenges. Some behavioural interventions may also help.{{cite journal |last1=Ebbert |first1=JO |last2=Elrashidi |first2=MY |last3=Stead |first3=LF |date=26 October 2015 |title=Interventions for smokeless tobacco use cessation. |journal=The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews |volume=2015 |issue=10 |pages=CD004306 |doi=10.1002/14651858.CD004306.pub5 |pmc=6793613 |pmid=26501380}}

Prevalence

More than 300 million people are using smokeless tobacco worldwide.{{cite journal |last1=Rostron |first1=Brian L |last2=Chang |first2=Joanne T |last3=Anic |first3=Gabriella M |last4=Tanwar |first4=Manju |last5=Chang |first5=Cindy M |last6=Corey |first6=Catherine G |year=2018 |title=Smokeless tobacco use and circulatory disease risk: a systematic review and meta-analysis |journal=Open Heart |volume=5 |issue=2 |pages=e000846 |doi=10.1136/openhrt-2018-000846 |issn=2053-3624 |pmc=6196954 |pmid=30364426}} People of many regions, including India, Pakistan, other Asian countries, and North America, have a long history of smokeless tobacco use. Once addicted to nicotine from smokeless tobacco use, many people, particularly young people, expand their tobacco use by smoking cigarettes. Because young people who use smokeless tobacco can become addicted to nicotine, they may be more likely to also become cigarette smokers. Youth are particularly susceptible to starting smokeless tobacco use.

= United States =

Males were more likely than females to have used smokeless tobacco in the past month. In 2014, 3.3 percent of people aged 12 or older (an estimated 8.7 million people) used smokeless tobacco in the past month. Past month smokeless tobacco use remained relatively stable between 2002 and 2014. Past month smokeless tobacco use between 2002 and 2014 was mostly consistent among adults aged 26 or older. There was more variability in the percentages of young adults aged 18 to 25 and adolescents aged 12 to 17 who used smokeless tobacco between 2002 and 2014. Smokeless tobacco use for adolescents aged 12 to 17 was higher during the mid-2000s, but the 2014 estimates were closer to the lower levels seen in the early 2000s. In 2014, an estimated 1.0 million people aged 12 or older used smokeless tobacco for the first time in the past year; this represents 0.5 percent of people who had not previously used smokeless tobacco. Prevalence of smokeless tobacco types that contain areca nut is increasing in the Western Pacific.

In 2016 about 2 of every 100 middle school students in the US (2.2%) reported current use of smokeless tobacco. In 2016 nearly 6 of every 100 high school students in the US (5.8%) reported current use of smokeless tobacco.

Public policy

{{See also|Tobacco politics}}

= WHO FCTC policies =

The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) contains a set of common goals, minimum standards for tobacco control policy in the 168 countries which signed it. The FCTC policies are also applicable for smokeless tobacco however they are less implemented in regards to these products. Only 57 countries have policies regulating smokeless tobacco use. 13 countries and the European Union apply a ban for advertising and promoting smokeless tobacco. The sale of smokeless tobacco to minors (Article 16 of FCTC) is restricted only in 13 countries and the WHO-defined Eastern Mediterranean region. 11 countries use taxation and pricing measures (Article 6) to reduce use in the general population.{{Cite web |date=17 November 2004 |title=WHO | Updated status of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control |url=http://www.who.int/tobacco/framework/countrylist/en/ |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041117032449/http://www.who.int/tobacco/framework/countrylist/en/ |archive-date=17 November 2004 |access-date=12 December 2021}}

In countries where they are applied to smokeless tobacco, FCTC policies had a positive impact on reducing their use. If multiple policies, including large taxes, are implemented, premature deaths can be prevented. However if taxation is higher for smoking products only people might switch to cheaper alternatives like smokeless tobacco.

= Banning =

The manufacture, distribution and sale of smokeless tobacco is banned completely in Bhutan, Singapore, and Sri Lanka. Partial bans on import and sales on some products are in effect in Australia, Bahrain, Brazil, India, Iran, Tanzania, Thailand, New Zealand, the UK and the European Union.

History

Smokeless tobacco was first discussed in the English language in 1683 as a powdered tobacco for breathing into the nose. People have used it for over a thousand years.{{cite journal|last1=Schivo|first1=Michael|last2=Avdalovic|first2=Mark V.|last3=Murin|first3=Susan|title=Non-Cigarette Tobacco and the Lung|journal=Clinical Reviews in Allergy & Immunology|volume=46|issue=1|date=February 2014|pages=34–53|issn=1080-0549|doi=10.1007/s12016-013-8372-0|pmid=23673789|s2cid=23626872}} Cigarette manufacturers have penetrated the smokeless tobacco market.{{cite journal|last1=Levy|first1=David T.|last2=Cummings|first2=K. Michael|last3=Villanti|first3=Andrea C.|last4=Niaura|first4=Ray|last5=Abrams|first5=David B.|last6=Fong|first6=Geoffrey T.|last7=Borland|first7=Ron|title=A framework for evaluating the public health impact of e-cigarettes and other vaporized nicotine products|journal=Addiction|volume=112|issue=1|year=2017|pages=8–17|issn=0965-2140|doi=10.1111/add.13394|pmc=5079857|pmid=27109256}}

= Positions of medical organizations =

As long ago as 1986, the advisory committee to the Surgeon General concluded that the use of smokeless tobacco "is not a safe substitute for smoking cigarettes. It can cause cancer and a number of noncancerous oral conditions and can lead to nicotine addiction and dependence". According to a 2002 report by the Royal College of Physicians, "As a way of using nicotine, the consumption of non-combustible tobacco is of the order of 10–1,000 times less hazardous than smoking, depending on the product". A panel of experts convened by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in 2006 stated that the "range of risks, including nicotine addiction, from smokeless tobacco products may vary extensively because of differing levels of nicotine, carcinogens, and other toxins in different products". In 2010 the National Cancer Institute stated that "because all tobacco products are harmful and cause cancer, the use of all of these products should be strongly discouraged. There is no safe level of tobacco use. People who use any type of tobacco product should be urged to quit". In 2015 the American Cancer Society stated that "Using any kind of spit or smokeless tobacco is a major health risk. It's less lethal than smoking tobacco, but less lethal is a far cry from safe." In 2017 the World Health Organization states that "Smokeless tobacco use is a significant part of the overall world tobacco problem."

Public perceptions

Many people who use smokeless tobacco may think it is safer than smoking, but all tobacco products contain toxicants, and use of smokeless tobacco poses its own significant health risks. In South and South-East Asia these products are considered part of the cultural heritage and there is little enthusiasm for regulation. Around 80% of users live in these regions.{{cite news |last1=Siddiqi |first1=Kamran |title=Smokeless tobacco products flying under the radar of regulation in many countries |url=https://theconversation.com/smokeless-tobacco-products-flying-under-the-radar-of-regulation-in-many-countries-114680 |access-date=20 May 2019 |work=The Conversation |date=5 April 2019}}

See also

{{commons category|Snuff (tobacco)}}

{{commons category|Chewing tobacco}}

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References