Despite being positioned as a tool for quitting smoking, vaping is as potentially harmful as cigarettes – and can cause both mouth and lung cancer.
Despite health chiefs across the world saying that e-cigarettes are less damaging to the body than traditional smoking products, Australian researchers have made the strongest link yet between the gadgets and the disease.
A team based out of the University of New South Wales in Sydney reviewed all the available literature into the potential harms of vaping that were published between 2017 and 2025.
The most concerning studies, they noted, are the ones that show that vaping can cause changes to a user’s DNA, increasing the risk of cell malfunction linked to cancer.
They concluded that vaping is not risk free. It causes tissue damage to the respiratory tract, which has been linked to the development of lung cancer, and it also causes changes to the oral microbiome. This drives inflammation and increases the risk of oral cancer.
The risks are highest for those who smoke both traditional cigarettes and use vapes, approximately half of the smoking population; the toxic combination increases their risk of lung cancer four-fold.
Professor Bernard Stewart, study lead author, said: ‘The research shows vaping is not an alternative to smoking or illicit drugs. It is not an alternative to anything in the context of being safer.
‘It’s dangerous and that’s the message.’
Presenting the strongest evidence to date into the harms of vaping, Australian researchers have linked the dirty habit to lung and oral cancer
Generally, for people diagnosed with mouth cancer in England, around 60 per cent will survive their cancer for five years after diagnosis.
For lung cancer, the prognosis is much bleaker, with only 10 per cent of patients surviving more than ten years.
In the UK, the Government has already begun to take action to clamp down on the number of young people taking up vaping, introducing a ban on disposable vapes last year. Vaping may also be banned in cars due to concerns over second-hand vapour.
However, the new review suggests precautionary measures such as these, which flag vapes as possibly carcinogenic, do not go far enough when there is ‘no doubt’ that vaping gives rise to these cancers.
‘It took about 100 years for the evidence to be conclusive enough to say that smoking causes lung cancer and the history of events evolved over time as people became more and more exposed to tobacco,’ Professor Freddy Sitas, an expert in future health systems at the university and study co-author said.
‘And we are seeing a similar evolution with e-cigarettes.
‘As such, e-cigarettes should not be offered as a pathway to quit smoking to put patients at ease, particularly without strict precautions around minimising dual use.’
To support their claims, the researchers highlighted the case of a 19-year-old boy with an extensive history of vaping, who despite his young age, developed an aggressive form of mouth cancer.
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The teenager was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, which is extremely rare in the absence of a HPV infection, leading them to deduce that vaping may lead to oral cavity cancer.
The inflammation and oxidative stress in the mouth and along the respiratory tract caused by vaping has also been linked to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) – a lung condition that can trigger organ failure – heart disease, narrowing of arteries and neural changes in the brain.
However, definitive evidence that vaping causes oral and lung cancer is still lacking – given that it is a fairly new technology and there is currently not enough studies focusing on people who have only vaped to make a quantitative assessment.
But the experts’ message is clear.
Professor Sitas said: ‘Delayed findings have played right into the hands of tobacco companies who don’t mind whether they make their money though vapes or cigarettes.
‘We know that there is a significant group of people who both vape and smoke, despite the former being marketed as an effective means to stop smoking.
‘We’ve always assumed that vapes are safer than cigarettes, but what we’re showing is that they might be as safe after all.
‘It’s like saying that knives are less dangerous than machine guns because they can kill fewer people in a given time. That notion is absurd and it’s absurd to approach vaping in reference to the safety of smoking.
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‘While our understanding of causation has improved, we should not have to wait 100 years to decide what to do.
‘There is a window of opportunity now to be able to discern these effects and now is the time to be proactive rather than reactive.’
The need for more ways to help patients quit smoking is clear, with lung cancer still killing more than 33,000 people a year in the UK.
Smoking is also the leading cause of progressive lung condition Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), which affects around 1.7million people in the UK and claims 30,000 lives every year.
Whilst cigarettes contain dozens of toxic chemicals, including nicotine, the most dangerous of them is tar which damages the lungs and leads to cancerous changes in the cells.
Vapes, in contrast, don’t contain tar or carbon monoxide which experts previously thought were behind cigarettes’ sinister health impacts.
However, they do contain low levels of toxic chemicals such as formaldehyde which drive inflammation, oxidative stress and DNA changes that have been linked to cancer.
It’s for these reasons that, since 2023, vapes have been offered on the NHS to patients attempting to kick cigarettes. However, evidence now suggests that vaping is not as nearly as ‘safe’ as once thought and could be driving cancer rates in young people.
Research shows that head and neck cancers – including those affecting the mouth and throat – have surged by more than a third in Britain since the early 90s.
Experts say the surge is mostly driven by diagnoses of younger people in their 40s and 50s.
Smoking, alcohol and human papillomavirus (HPV) – a normally harmless virus that is spread sexually and through skin contact – are the primary causes.
And now it’s thought that vaping could be adding to the disease burden.










