Skip to content
Metro Sun Daily

Metro Sun Daily

REAL NEWS * REAL TIME

  • Front Page
  • Home
  • Nation
  • Metro
  • Regions
  • Global
  • Feature
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Sports
  • OFW
  • VP Sara Impeachment
  • Feature

Innovation key to reducing smoking-related diseases—French cancer expert

admin June 7, 2022

AN international cancer doctor said science and innovation provide the best solution to reducing smoking-related diseases, as current strategies failed to address the smoking epidemic.

Dr. David Khayat, a top French oncologist, said innovation in nicotine consumption with the use of vapes, heated tobacco products (HTPs) and snus provide alternatives to reduce exposure to carcinogens.

He said nicotine does not cause cancer.

“In a perfect world, the dream is to eliminate smoking and therefore all smoking-related diseases. If not possible, I think we have to take decision based on science, and not on emotion or opinion,” Dr. Khayat said in a virtual presentation on the topic “Smoking, Cancer and Tobacco Harm Reduction” during the 115th Philippine Medical Association Annual Convention and Scientific Meetings held on May 19 to 22, 2022.

Resource speakers during the scientific meeting include Dr. Annielyn Beryl Ong-Cornel, Dr. Bu Castro, Dr. Guia Tan, Dr. Maria Encarnita Limpin, and Dr. Rizalina Raquel. The session was chaired by Dr. Ricardo A. Batac.

Innovative solution

Dr. Khayat, who has devoted himself to the fight against cancer for more than three decades, said innovative solutions including snus, vapes and HTPs, “are showing very significant efficacy in helping people switch from real cigarettes that are very bad to their health.”

He asked Filipino doctors to rethink their strategies to address the smoking problem as the current policies mostly failed to help smokers quit, leaving millions of Filipino smokers exposed to diseases. Dr. Khayat, a professor of Oncology at Pierre et Marie Curie University and head of Medical Oncology at La Pitié-Salpétrière Hospital in Paris, said if the elimination of smoking is not possible, smokers who would not quit even when afflicted with cancer should be given the opportunity to reduce their exposure to toxicants and carcinogens from tobacco smoke.

He said the current anti-smoking policies, which revolve around bans and increases in taxes, failed to address the problem of smoking cigarette, which contains more than 6,000 chemicals and ultrafine particles, including 80 carcinogens or potential carcinogens.

If prohibition or ban on smoking was not working, it is the responsibility of medical professionals to provide alternatives that reduce the harm from smoking, and these should include innovative smoke-free products, he said. “The greater amount of carcinogens you are exposed to, the higher the risk of cancer,” said Dr. Khayat. “Although 80 percent of all lung cancers occur in smokers, only 8 percent of all smokers will develop lung cancer.”

Poor lifestyle choices

He said harm reduction is not a new concept, but a term that arose in the context of drug addiction.

“People make poor lifestyle choices despite suffering negative health effects,” he said.

It was the late Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher who pioneered the focus on harm reduction during the AIDS epidemic in the UK, which resulted in the lowest rates of HIV among drug users in the word, he said.

Over the past 12 years, UK think tank Centre for Social Justice led the change in drug policy in favor of abstinence. The outcome from such shift is that drug-related fatalities doubled since 2011, and one in three drug-related deaths in Europe are now in the UK, he said.

Dr. Khayat said smoke-free alternatives such as snus, electronic cigarettes (vapes) and heated tobacco products (HTPs) are “showing very significant efficacy in helping people switch from real cigarettes that are very bad to health.”

He asked the medical community to look at nicotine as part of the solution.

He said that nicotine, while addictive, is not a source of cancer, and health experts even prescribe nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) to help smokers quit.

“If you want to reduce exposure to carcinogens, you must identify the nature, production and exposure source of carcinogens,” said Dr. Khayat.

“Smokers commonly misperceive that nicotine is a major carcinogen,” he said, adding that it is contrary to the conclusion of Cancer Research UK, which found that nicotine is not responsible for the harmful effects of smoking.

“Nicotine does not cause cancer, and people have used nicotine replacement therapy safely for many years. NRT is safe enough to be prescribed by doctors,” the Cancer Research UK said.

Smoke-free alternatives

He said while the best thing for patients is to completely quit smoking, most fail to do so, with studies showing that as many as 64 percent of people with lung cancer continue to smoke, even though they know that it is bad for their health. “The fact is 80 percent of smokers would never leave smoking. And 64 percent of people smoking will not stop even if they have cancer,” he said.

“So we have to find a way. Knowing that smoking was bad, they continue to smoke even if they have cancer. So we have to provide them with a solution, if not they are going to be desperate.”

Dr. Khayat said smoke-free alternatives such as snus, electronic cigarettes (vapes) and heated tobacco products (HTPs) are “showing very significant efficacy in helping people switch from real cigarettes that are very bad to health.”

He asked the medical community to look at nicotine as part of the solution. He said that nicotine, while addictive, is not a source of cancer, and health experts even prescribe nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) to help smokers quit.

“If you want to reduce exposure to carcinogens, you must identify the nature, production and exposure source of carcinogens,” said Dr. Khayat.

“Smokers commonly misperceive that nicotine is a major carcinogen,” he said, adding that it is contrary to the conclusion of Cancer Research UK, which found that nicotine is not responsible for the harmful effects of smoking.

“Nicotine does not cause cancer, and people have used nicotine replacement therapy safely for many years. NRT is safe enough to be prescribed by doctors,” the Cancer Research UK said.

Providing solution

He said while the best thing for patients is to completely quit smoking, most fail to do so, with studies showing that as many as 64 percent of people with lung cancer continue to smoke, even though they know that it is bad for their health.

“The fact is 80 percent of smokers would never leave smoking. And 64 percent of people smoking will not stop even if they have cancer,” he said.

“So we have to find a way. Knowing that smoking was bad, they continue to smoke even if they have cancer. So we have to provide them with a solution, if not they are going to be desperate.”

Dr. Khayat said doctors have a role to play to help remove the stigma among smokers. He said this is where tobacco harm reduction comes in.

“Accepting that some levels of bad behaviors are inevitable, therefore, we should target to minimize the harm people suffer as a consequence,” he said.

In Japan, a study found reduced formation of harmful and potentially harmful constituents in HTPS compared to cigarettes.

A study on the effects of switching to HTP concluded in 2021 that consistent improvements in respiratory symptoms, exercise tolerance, quality of life and rate of disease and exacerbations were observed in patients with COPD who abstained from smoking or substantially reduced their cigarette consumption by switching to HTP use.

On a country level, Japan experienced a 34-percent decline in cigarettes sales in four years following the introduction of HTPs.

In July 2020, the US FDA determined that the exposure modification order for IQOS would be appropriate to promote the public health and is expected to benefit the health of the population as a whole.

A 2021 study also suggested that the use of e-cigs could be just a third as harmful to health as smoking especially in high-income country settings.

The estimate is based on number of biomarker studies.

Tags: cancer expert smoking-related disease vape

Post navigation

Previous Owner of SUV in Manda hit and run identified
Next At least P20M worth of damage in agri reported

Related Stories

Filipino Fashion Gala’s 10th Season Sells Out; Charina & Gene Josol Shine with ‘Sommera’
  • Feature

Filipino Fashion Gala’s 10th Season Sells Out; Charina & Gene Josol Shine with ‘Sommera’

MODELMOM WORLD 2026 is Cebuana Aniana Saunders
  • Feature

MODELMOM WORLD 2026 is Cebuana Aniana Saunders

Navigating Storms: Pinoys face fuel crisis amid VP Sara impeachment proceedings
  • Feature

Navigating Storms: Pinoys face fuel crisis amid VP Sara impeachment proceedings

House of Representatives
APRIL 22, 2026
ODDNEWS

  • Man arrested for faking lotto ticket to claim ₱172M jackpot
  • General in Hot Water: Napolcom cites P70k shoes as grounds for charges
  • Christmas Tragedy: Italian man chokes to death on panettone during family reunion
  • Japanese Woman Weds AI: The future of relationships?
  • A Single Dad’s Desperate Act: Police Chief’s Kindness Saves the Day
  • Security guard returns lost P1.5M bracelet

Source: USD/PHP @ Wed, 29 Apr.

Weather

Manila
Current weather
-º
Sunrise-
Sunset-
-
-
Forecast
Rain chance-
-
-
Forecast
Rain chance-
-
-
Forecast
Rain chance-
Manila weather

Latest Comments

  1. không che on Zaldy Co has no Portuguese passport, Embassy source says
  2. 나루토카지노 on Fuel prices poised for further surge next week: diesel P170/liter; gasoline P120/liter

  • Front Page
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Donation
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
©2026 MetroSunDaily. All rights reserved. | DarkNews by AF themes.