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Australian Study: E-Cigarettes Likely Cause Lung and Oral Cancer

Researchers said the review of more than 100 studies found DNA damage, inflammation and mouse tumors in evidence that vapes may cause cancer.

  • A comprehensive UNSW review of more than 100 studies concludes that e-cigarettes are likely to cause oral and lung cancer, with lead author Professor Bernard Stewart stating vaping is hazardous in its own right.
  • Researchers sought to assess "the carcinogenic impact of e-cigarettes in their own right," challenging the marketing narrative that vaping serves as a safer, less smelly alternative to burning tobacco leaves.
  • The review identified DNA damage, oxidative stress, and inflammation as biomarkers, while laboratory experiments in mice confirmed lung tumors developed directly from exposure to vape aerosols.
  • Johns Hopkins Medicine physician Dr. Panagis Galiatsatos warned that "damage is happening" even if effects are not immediately visible, cautioning that current usage creates conditions leading to future disease.
  • As e-cigarettes were introduced about 20 years ago, experts argue against waiting decades to act; Sitas noted, "Though smoking was once given the benefit of doubt," the same should not now be accorded to vaping.
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59 Articles

Zero HedgeZero Hedge
Reposted by
Nemos News NetworkNemos News Network
Right

Not Just Cigarettes, Vaping Likely Causes Cancer, Major Study Finds

ZeroHedge - On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero

·United States
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A new study shows that e-cigarettes may be carcinogenic. Ute Mons from the Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg explains what smokers should know.

·Zürich, Switzerland
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hna.dehna.de
Reposted by
tz.detz.de
Center

A new scientific overview warns that vapors probably cause oral and lung cancer. Researchers find DNA damage, inflammation and epigenetic changes.

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XinhuaXinhua
Reposted by
risingnepaldaily.comrisingnepaldaily.com
Left

Vaping likely to cause cancer: Australian study

Vaping likely to cause cancer: Australian study

·China
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The spokesman-Review broke the news in Spokane, United States on Monday, March 30, 2026.
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