Disposable e-cigarettes release more toxic metals than 20 cigarettes, fueling a lung cancer epidemic
By ljdevon // 2025-06-27
 
The vaping industry, once hailed as a "safer" alternative to smoking, faces damning new evidence exposing how disposable e-cigarettes flood users' lungs with deadly heavy metals — some at levels far exceeding traditional cigarettes. A groundbreaking study from the University of California, Davis reveals shocking concentrations of lead, nickel, and antimony in popular vape brands like ELF Bar and ESCO Bars, with some devices leaching more cancer-causing toxins than 20 cigarettes in a single day. With millions of teens and young adults hooked on these unregulated, flavored products, experts warn that vaping may soon eclipse smoking as a leading cause of lung cancer — a crisis amplified by corporate negligence and FDA inaction. Key points:
  • Disposable vapes contain up to 13 times more lead than a pack of cigarettes, with some exposing users to the equivalent of 19 cigarettes daily.
  • Nickel and antimony levels in tested devices exceeded cancer safety limits, raising risks for lung scarring, asthma, and respiratory failure.
  • Teens and young adults are primary targets, with brands like ELF Bar dominating illegal sales—$2.4 billion worth in 2023 alone.
  • Heavy metals leach from heating coils into e-liquids, directly entering the lungs and lingering for months.
  • New research links vaping after quitting smoking to a 269% higher risk of lung cancer death, debunking "harm reduction" myths.

The hidden heavy metal crisis

For years, Big Tobacco’s playbook has been simple: addict, deceive, and profit. Now, the vaping industry is perfecting it. The UC Davis study, published in ACS Central Science, tested seven disposable e-cigarettes from top brands, simulating real-world use. Researchers discovered that Esco Bars released lead levels equivalent to smoking 19 cigarettes daily within the first 200 puffs. Lead — a neurotoxin linked to lung, kidney, and brain cancers — wasn’t the only threat. Nickel, tied to nasal and sinus cancers, and antimony, a flame retardant used in batteries, seeped into vapors at concentrations breaching federal safety thresholds. "The levels were so high, I thought our instrument was broken," admitted lead researcher Mark Salazar. Unlike cigarettes, which contain 7,000 known carcinogens, vapes were marketed as "cleaner" due to their lower toxin count. But this study reveals a darker truth: Heavy metals in vapes bio-accumulate, meaning they embed in lung tissue for months, causing long-term damage. The FDA has banned flavored e-cigarettes, yet brands like ELF Bar and Esco Bars dominate gas stations and online markets through illegal sales. In 2022, Esco Bars raked in 82 million in U.S.sales, while Reuter estimates the black-market vape trade hit 2.4 billion last year — all untested, unregulated, and unchecked. "This is corporate greed exploiting a loophole," says Brett Poulin, senior author of the study. "These devices are worse than cigarettes in some cases, yet they’re marketed to kids with candy flavors." Teen vaping rates remain alarmingly high, with 8% of high schoolers using e-cigarettes. The CDC identified ELF Bar as the most popular brand among youth, leveraging sweet flavors like "blue razz lemonade" to hook a new generation.

The smoking cessation myth unravels

Pro-vaping advocates argue e-cigarettes help smokers quit. But a nationwide Korean cohort study published this month delivers a fatal blow to that narrative. Tracking 4.3 million former smokers, researchers found that those who switched to vaping faced a 269% higher risk of lung cancer death compared to those who quit entirely. Even more chilling: ex-smokers who vaped within five years of quitting saw their lung cancer risk spike by 26%. "This isn’t harm reduction—it’s harm substitution," warns Dr. Suh Eun-Young, the study’s lead author. The findings align with the first documented case of vaping-induced lung cancer in a New Jersey man, detailed in a recent case study. His autopsy revealed tumors saturated with nickel and lead — the same metals prevalent in disposable vapes. Vaping’s heavy metal crisis mirrors Big Tobacco’s darkest secrets. Decades ago, researchers discovered that phosphate fertilizers used on tobacco crops contained radioactive polonium-210, which clung to cigarette smoke particles. Smokers unwittingly inhaled this isotope, which lodged in their lungs for six months, dramatically increasing cancer risks. Today, vapes replicate this horror—with lead and nickel particles replacing polonium. And just as secondhand smoke harmed bystanders, third-hand vape residue contaminates homes and schools, exposing non-users to the same toxins. "The parallels are terrifying," says Poulin. "We’re watching history repeat itself." With lung cancer already the leading U.S. malignancy, surpassing colorectal cancers in 1984, vaping threatens to accelerate the crisis. If current trends continue, cancer may soon overtake heart disease as America’s top killer, ending women’s lifespan advantage over men. Experts demand immediate FDA crackdowns on illegal vape sales, public health campaigns debunking "safe vaping" myths, and stricter penalties for companies targeting minors. Sources include: Dailymail.co.uk AbstractsOnline.com Dailymail.co.uk