Mail & Guardian

Vaping could pose a cancer risk, study finds

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Vaping may raise the risk of cancer because it leads to DNA damage, even though it contains fewer carcinogen­s than tobacco smoke, a United States study has found.

The report in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences did not compare the cancer-causing potential of traditiona­l cigarettes with e-cigarettes.

However, in studies on lab mice, those exposed to e-cigarette smoke “had higher levels of DNA damage in the heart, lungs, and bladder, compared with control mice exposed to filtered air”, it said.

Similar effects were seen when human lung and bladder cells were exposed to nicotine and nicotinede­rived nitrosamin­e ketone, a carci- nogenic nicotine derivative.

These exposed cells were more likely to mutate and become cancerous than control cells.

“Thus, although e-cigarette smoke has fewer carcinogen­s than tobacco smoke, e-cigarette smokers might have a higher risk than nonsmokers of developing lung and bladder cancers and heart diseases,” according to the study, led by Moon-shong Tang of the Institute of Environmen­tal Medicine at New York University.

More work is needed to uncover the true risk of vaping, which is widely seen as a safer alternativ­e than traditiona­l cigarettes.

Ed Stephens, a senior research fellow at the University of St Andrews, called the report a “valuable contributi­on” to the field of research.

“Unfortunat­ely, no direct comparison­s were made with tobacco smoke; instead the authors cite another study that found a key biomarker related to such genetic damage to be present in very much smaller quantities (97% less) in the urine of vapers compared with smokers,” he added.

“That study and this new research are both consistent with the widely held view that vaping is not without risk of cancer and other diseases but that risk is usually considerab­ly lower than smoking.”

Peter Hajek, the director of the Tobacco Dependence Research Unit at Queen Mary University of London, said the study methods are of “unclear relevance for effects of vaping”.

“Human cells were submerged in nicotine and in off-the-shelf bought carcinogen­ic nitrosamin­es.

“It is not surprising of course that this damaged the cells, but this has no relationsh­ip to any effects of e-cigarettes on people who use them,” he said.

“No comparison with convention­al cigarettes was made but in the text of the article, the authors acknowledg­e the key bit of informatio­n that is of crucial relevance in this story: vapers show a reduction in these chemicals of 97% compared to smokers. They should have added that this may well be the level that nonsmokers obtain from their environmen­t.”

A comprehens­ive review of the scientific literature, released earlier this month by the US National Academies of Science, found that vaping is probably less harmful than cigarettes but may lead to addiction.

It cautioned that the true health effects of the habit remain unclear, since the trend is relatively new.

About 18-million American use e-cigarettes. — AFP

“E-cigarette smokers might have a higher risk than nonsmokers of developing lung and bladder cancers and heart diseases”

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