Press Release

Feds plan to reduce nicotine in cigarettes

Vermont smokers part of UVM study on low-nicotine smokes

UVM researchers are on the ground floor of a federal plan to limit the amount of nicotine in cigarettes.

Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and UVM Cancer Center member Elias Klemperer, Ph.D., was recently awarded his first R01 grant—a combined award from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and the Food and Drug Administration Center for Tobacco Products —to further study nicotine-limiting standards for cigarettes and e-cigarettes among adults in Rhode Island, Vermont, and Northern New York State.

It’s been well-documented that cigarette smoking is the primary cause of preventable illness and death in the United States. In recent years, the prevalence of using multiple tobacco products, notably cigarettes and e-cigarettes, has been on the rise in the U.S. While e-cigarettes offer a potentially safer alternative, most users continue to smoke cigarettes in the long term, especially those who use e-cigarettes infrequently. To combat this issue, the FDA is planning to impose a nicotine-limiting standard on cigarettes; however, it’s uncertain how this regulation will affect dual users of cigarettes and e-cigarettes.

Klemperer, in collaboration with Professor of Psychiatry and Vermont Center for Behavior and Health Director Stephen Higgins, Ph.D., alongside colleagues from the Larner College of Medicine and Brown University, will conduct a 12-week, double-blind randomized controlled trial. The primary objective is to investigate the impact of the proposed nicotine-limiting standard for cigarettes on smoking behavior among adult dual users. Additionally, the study aims to assess whether any observed changes are influenced by corresponding limitations on e-cigarette nicotine content. Participants will be provided with four different combinations of high- and low-nicotine e-cigarettes and cigarettes, allowing researchers to determine the most effective combination in reducing cigarette use.

This grant follows a series of successful trials led by Higgins between 2016 and 2019, which revealed promising results regarding the effectiveness of very low-nicotine-content (VLNC) cigarettes in reducing smoking rates and dependence severity among vulnerable populations. These findings underscore the potential of reducing nicotine content in cigarettes to facilitate smoking cessation efforts, particularly among high-risk individuals.

“Cigarette smoking remains the most preventable cause of death in the United States,” said Klemperer. “However, tobacco use is changing, and this study will help us understand how policies to limit nicotine could affect adults who use both cigarettes and e-cigarettes.”

This report derived mostly from a UVM press release.


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Categories: Press Release

3 replies »

  1. Actually it isn’t the nicotine that is addictive. Dr. Bryan Ardis has researched in DEPTH that the tobacco companies are spraying the tobacco plants with addictive chemicals, since tobacco itself is NOT addictive! Tobacco is an antidote for the spike protein in the Covid jabs. I suggest people read his studies or watch his videos. Turns out most smokers who got Covid very seldom had to go to the hospital. Remember Fauci saying that smokers MUST give up smoking because they are targeted by the virus?! Just the opposite is true. We now know what his information is worth.

  2. Thank you for allowing Kathy’s comments. For too long the alternative medical community has been censored and controlled. Science requires challenges so new things can be discovered. I refuse to let anyone, especially government or an unelected body from the WHO force me to comply with mandates. My body is Sovreign! I, myself, have the intellect to determine what goes into my body. AI medical models are only based on pharma solutions so beware of the next wave of so called experts. I grow my own tobacco for this reason.. That will be outlawed next. Join Native American Indian medical communities because they are not governed under the USA medical laws.