In 1981 an influential Japanese study showed an association between
passive smoking and lung cancer. This article documentsthe tobacco
industry's attempts to refute this study by producinga credible
alternative study
In 1981 Japanese investigator Takeshi Hirayama published a cohort study
examining the association of passive smoking and lungcancer among
non-smoking wives of smokers in Japan.1 The studyconcluded that wives of heavy smokers had up to twice the risk
of developing lung cancer as wives of non-smokers and that therisk
was dose related. The Hirayama study was influential becauseit
launched an extraordinary amount of critical debate 23 and has been one of the most frequently cited
studies in regulatoryproceedings, 45 risk assessments,6
and the media.7
The tobacco industry has used a variety of tactics to maintain scientific
debate about whether secondhand smoke has any harmfuleffects.
568-14 We identify and analyse internal tobaccoindustry
documents that describe the industry's response to theHirayama
study.
Summary points
The tobacco industry generated a study, the "Japanese spousal study,"
in an attempt to refute the findings of a 1981 cohort study showing an
association between secondhand exposure to tobacco smoke and lung cancer
Internal tobacco industry documents describe how the tobacco industry
considered multiple strategies to conceal its involvement in the Japanese
spousal study
The tobacco industry considered funding the study through the Center
for Indoor Air Research, a research organisation supported by the tobacco
industry, in order to hide industry involvement
The parties involved in conducting the study included a tobacco
industry scientist, a tobacco industry consultant, an industry law firm,
and two Japanese investigators. The consultant was the sole author of the
final publication
Methods
We retrieved documents from the Legacy Tobacco Documents Library (www.legacy.library.ucsf.edu)
and tobacco industry websites(www.pmdocs.com,
www.lorillarddocs.com,
www.rjrtdocs.com,
www.bw.aalatg.com,and
www.ctr-usa.org/ctr) using the search
terms "Hirayama Study,""Japanese Spousal Study," "ETS," and
"meta-analysis." We alsosearched for adjacent bates numbers
(numerical identifiers assignedto tobacco industry documents
produced during litigation, eachpage having a unique identifier) and
named consultants. We identified327 documents, of which 48 discussed
the industry's plans to developa study to counter the Hirayamastudy.
The tobacco industry's response
The tobacco companies decided to generate a study, called the Japanese
spousal study, to counter the Hirayama study.15-18
Thegoal of the study was to produce a credible, peer reviewed
articlethat could be used as a public relations tool.19
We describehow the tobacco industry participated in funding,
conducting,and publishing thestudy.
Funding the Japanese spousal study
The Japanese spousal study seems to have originatedas a grant
proposal submitted to the Center for Indoor Air Research(CIAR) by
Japanese investigators Eiji Yano and Jun Kagawa.20This centre, created in 1988, was funded by the tobacco industryto support indoor air research, and some projects were selected
for funding by tobacco industry executives.8 Memos
from RobertPages and T S Osdene of the research and development team
at PhilipMorris to Steven Parrish, senior vice president of Philip
Morris,describe deliberations about CIAR funding for the study:
This is not a project that should be funded by CIAR, although there
may be (I'm not convinced yet) a reason to say it was
sponsored by CIAR so as to "hide" industry involvement [emphasisin
original].15
One may wish to use a CIAR cover for this project. I believe it is very
important that this be done with all due haste.16
The tobacco companies decided to fund the study themselves. Although there
was unanimous agreement from companies such asBrown and Williamson
and British American Tobacco that the studyshould be conducted,
these companies stated that they could not"pay their share."21
After extensive deliberations, Philip Morrisagreed to fund the
study, with additional support from RJ Reynolds,British American
Tobacco, Reemtsma, Imperial Tobacco, and Rothmans.22
The tobacco industry documents include the grant proposal submitted to CIAR
by the Japanese scientists,23 and a later versionof this grant that had been edited by tobacco industry officials(fig 1). 2324 This later version was labelled as a "privileged
and confidential attorney work product," thus protecting it from
public disclosure. 1225
The edited proposal contained modificationsof some of the original
study objectives.
Fig 1. Covington and Burling
privileged and confidential attorney work product "Proposal for an
applied research study to investigate exposure to environmental tobacco
smoke in non-smoking Japanese women." 12 August 1991. (Philip Morris
documents website. Bates No 2023544523_4530. 8 page document)
Conducting the Japanese spousal study
Almost 10 years after Hirayama's publication,the following memo from
Robert Pages to Steven Parrish, both ofPhilip Morris, described the
plan for conducting the Japanesespousal study:
There are two Japanese listed as co-principal investigators. Chris Proctor
[chief scientist, British American Tobacco] wouldbe a
"behind-the-scenes" study director . . . I think there'sa very
good chance that it will generate data which shows thatETS
exposure in nonsmoking Japanese women is not much differentfrom
that of European or US womencontrary
to what the apologistsfor Hirayama have been saying all these
years.15
The documents describe that the industry wanted a Japanese study to counter
Hirayama's conclusions because it believed thata counter-study
would be credible only if it was conducted inJapan by Japanese
investigators.15-17 The industry hoped to showthat the Hirayama study was unreliable.26
During the time between the submission of the original grant to CIAR and the
funding of the version edited by the tobaccoindustry, Peter N Lee,
an industry consultant,27 was asked to
review the original grant proposal. Lee was aware of Proctor'srole
in the project:
The tobacco industry's
plan for publishing the Japanese spousal study
"Proposal for an applied research study to investigate exposure to
environmental tobacco smoke in non-smoking Japanese women." 12 August 1991.24
Project management would be undertaken by Covington and Burling. This
would ensure appropriate detailed study design and performance, and enable
timely report development. The project managers would remain remote from any
scientific publications. They also would provide status reports to the
supporting companies every two months.
Two Japanese scientists will be the principal investigators. Professor
Jun Kagawa is an epidemiologist, physician and respiratory specialist
currently teaching medicine at the Department of Hygiene and Public Health,
Tokyo Women's Medical College. His research laboratory has experience with
measuring urinary cotinine. Professor Kagawa's prime responsibilities within
this project will be the management of sample analysis and being principal
author on the resulting scientific reports.
Professor Eiji Yano is an epidemiologist and respiratory specialist based
at the Department of Public Health at Teikyo University, Tokyo. Professor
Yano will be the principal contact with the market research agency, will
organise the data collection, the compilation of a database, and the data
analysis.
Mr Peter Lee also will be asked to assist in reviewing the study design
and in interpreting the data. It is not anticipated, however, that Mr Lee
will serve as a co-author of any of the publications flowing from the study.
I in fact would regard the collection of good data on misclassification
rates in Asian, and particularly Japanese, women asjust about the
most important thing that needs doing to furtherunderstanding of
the ETS/lung cancer issue. Demonstration of highrates in Japan
would (or ought to) dramatically influence interpretationof the
association seen between spouse smoking and lung cancerrisk. For
this reason I am very strongly supportive of Chris Proctor's
plans to get a study going in Japan [emphasis in original].28
Peter Lee was eventually incorporated into the study as a consultant.24
The tobacco industry planned to conceal its role in the Japanese spousal
study. In the following memos, T S Osdene and RobertPages (Philip
Morris) reported to Steven Parrish that Proctor'srole would be
hidden:
Also, I am of the opinion that Dr Chris Proctor might supervise this work
but his presence should be low key and not appearin any of the
publications, particularly since this is a Japanesestudy.16
Proctor (and his fee) may be necessary to help get this done . . . but this
should be a Japanese study: Proctor should notbe a co-author on
any publication that comes out of it.15
In addition, the survey instrument used for the study did not disclose any
tobacco industry involvement in the research.29
Publishing the Japanese spousal study
The parties involved in the Japanese spousalstudy included a tobacco
industry scientist (Chris Proctor), atobacco industry consultant
(Peter N Lee, paid $5000 in consultationfees),24
and an industry law firm (Covington and Burling, paid$30 000 for
"project management").24 The role of the Japaneseinvestigators was ambiguous. The box quotes a proposal, labelledas a Covington and Burling attorney work product, describing thevarious roles of the participants and the industry's plans for
authorship ofpublications.
As shown in fig 2, Chris Proctor delivered progress reports
(on Covington and Burling stationery) to tobacco industry executives,
3031 but his role
as acting investigator was never disclosed in scientific
publications. In 1993 Chris Proctor recommended a change in authorshipto tobacco company executives:
Fig 2. Letter from Christopher
Proctor, chief scientist at British American Tobacco and acting
investigator of the Japanese spousal study, to tobacco industry
executives with regard to study results. Covington and Burling document.
23 December 1991. (Philip Morris documents website. Bates No
2023544474_4475. 2 page document)
After considerable effort working with Dr Yano at Teikyo University, we
feel it is time to recommend that Mr Peter Lee beasked to submit
the Japanese spousal study research for publicationin the
British Medical Journal. We spoke with Mr Lee earlier today,
and he has agreed with this course of action, but will await final
approval.32
The documents do not describe what happened to alter the original plans for
authorship of the study. We found seven dateddrafts of the study
manuscript in the documents. The initial draftfeatured only the
Japanese investigators as authors,33 whereasthe second draft included Peter Lee as coauthor, 3435 and thethird and subsequent drafts
featured Peter Lee as the sole author.36-39Drafts four, five, six, and seven acknowledged Dr Yano's contributionand the tobacco industry's financial support. The sixth draft
included a note from Peter Lee's secretary indicating that thepaper
had been submitted to the American Journal of Epidemiology,
with the handwritten notation "rejected."38
Another draft, thesecond, included a cover memo stating that the
manuscript wouldbe submitted to the Lancet.34
Originally, industry executives planned to have the Japanese investigators
disseminate preliminary results in the BMJ, followedby full
publication in an epidemiological journal.17 As
shownin fig 3, the final publication in the
International Archivesof Occupational and Environmental Health
had Peter Lee as soleauthor and acknowledged Dr Eijo Yano. A general
disclosure offinancial support from "several companies of the
tobacco industry"was also included.
Fig 3. Title and acknowledgement
section of final publication of the Japanese spousal study in
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health,
featuring Peter Lee as sole author and acknowledging Eiji Yano as well
as financial support from "several companies of the tobacco industry"
Although there were several changes in the drafts related to how cotinine was
measured and used as a cut off for smoking,the conclusions of all
seven drafts remained consistent. The studyconcluded that there was
no direct evidence that secondhand exposureto tobacco smoke
increased risk of lung cancer.40 The finalpublication reported a cross sectional study of 400 married Japanesewomen. They were questioned about their smoking status and secondhandexposure to smoke and supplied urine for cotinine analysis. The
major finding of the paper was that the cotinine measurements
indicated that 22 out of 106 women who claimed never to have been
smokers were misclassified. The paper concluded that studies likethe
Hirayama study have a potential for misclassification biasand have
"little scientific basis."40
Conclusions
Internal tobacco industry documents show how the industry tried to hide its
involvement in refuting the Hirayama study. Accordingto authorship
criteria for research publications that were currentat the time of
the Japanese spousal study41 and more recentcontributorship guidelines, 4243 several of the parties involvedin
the study were apparently eligible for authorship, but onlyone was
anauthor.
Hidden or "ghost" authorship occurs in studies funded by other corporate
interests, as well as among academic researchers.42When the participants in the design, conduct, and reporting of
a study are hidden, credit and accountability for the work cannotbe
assessed.42
The acknowledgement of financial support from tobacco companies in the final
publication of the Japanese spousal study showshow financial
disclosure is an imperfect indicator of a sponsor'sinvolvement in
the research. The published disclosure that theauthor received
"financial support from several companies of thetobacco industry"40
does not fully describe the industry's involvementin the
study.
Acknowledgments
We thank Jim Repace, Stanton Glantz, Drummond Rennie, Ruth Malone, Josh
Dunsby, Jim Lightwood, and Anh Le for commentary andguidance on the
manuscript. We thank Martha Michel and StellaBialous for technicalsupport.
Contributors: M-KH conducted the document search, read and analysed the
documents, and drafted the manuscript. LAB advised on the search, read and
analysed documents, and revised the paper; she is also the primary investigator
of the larger study from which this project is derived. Both authors are
guarantors for the study.
Footnotes
Funding: This work was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute
(Grant No CA-87472] and the California Tobacco-RelatedDisease
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