4.5 Article

Flavour spectrum of the Puff family of disposable e-cigarettes

Journal

TOBACCO CONTROL
Volume 32, Issue E1, Pages E71-E77

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2021-056780

Keywords

advertising and promotion; electronic nicotine delivery devices; nicotine; public policy

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This study investigates the flavors marketed by the disposable e-cigarette brand Puff Bar and its copycats, revealing a wide range of flavors with fruit flavors predominating. It also highlights the emergence of a new popular flavor category combining fruit with menthol/mint. The study suggests that flavor regulations need to cover all recreational nicotine-containing products and address post-market flavor additions to be effective in protecting youth.
Background In January 2020, the US Food and Drug Administration prohibited the sale of flavours (except for menthol and tobacco) in prefilled pod devices such as JUUL to decrease youth vaping. Excluded from the prohibition were disposable devices. Objectives To determine the scope and scale of flavours marketed by Puff Bar, a leading disposable brand, and related products. Methods Disposable e-cigarette flavours were identified via online searches encompassing vendor websites, wholesale distributors, manufacturers (eg, made-in-china.com), and social media channel, Instagram, between June and August 2020. Results The 'Puff' brand name and iconic cloud logo appear on a variety of products of differing sizes and nicotine e-liquid volumes. Among Puff Bar and its copycats (Puff-a-Likes), 139 flavours were identified. Fruit flavours predominated comprising 82.2% of the flavour varieties (fruit 50%, fruit and menthol/mint 23.6%, and fruity drinks 8.6%). A prevalent new flavour category which combines fruit with menthol/mint (Ice) was offered in 33 varieties such as Lychee Ice, Lush Ice and Banana Ice. Disposable e-cigarette brands are undertaking measures to escape tobacco regulation (eg, non-tobacco-sourced nicotine) and flavour limitations via post-market flavour additions to unflavoured nicotine e-liquid. Conclusions The proliferation of flavoured disposable e-cigarette products, many of which are designed to emulate popular pod devices, illustrates that narrowly limited flavour regulations covering only a single category are destined to fail. To be effective in youth protection, flavour regulations need to apply to all recreational nicotine-containing products and need to include measures to counter post-market flavour addition.

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