Tag: John Dunne

  • Study Claiming Vaping ‘Likely’ Causes Cancer Faces Backlash

    Study Claiming Vaping ‘Likely’ Causes Cancer Faces Backlash

    On March 30, Oxford’s Carcinogenesis magazine published an article titled, “The carcinogenicity of e-cigarettes: a qualitative risk assessment,” where the authors concluded that nicotine-based e-cigarettes are “likely to be carcinogenic” to users, potentially contributing to oral and lung cancer risk. The authors admitted that the actual risk in humans was uncertain, but said research found DNA damage, oxidative stress, inflammation, and epigenetic changes in oral and respiratory tissues linked to exposure to vape-derived chemicals such as nicotine-derived nitrosamines, volatile organic compounds, flavoring agents, and trace metals.

    The article received immediate criticism, beginning with Peter Hajek, professor of clinical psychology and director of the Health and Lifestyle Research Unit at Queen Mary University of London, who said, “The review’s conclusions are misleading. The authors specify early on that they are not comparing vapers and smokers. This allows them to present a detection of any level of a suspect chemical, however negligible, as ‘carcinogenic.’”

    The basis of the research focused on studies published between 2017 and 2025.

    “This is largely a qualitative review drawing heavily on low-quality studies, including in vitro [study of cells] and animal experiments using unrealistic exposure scenarios,” said Dr. Marina Murphy, senior director of scientific affairs for Haypp Group. “Such studies may demonstrate biological plausibility, but plausibility alone is a weak basis for public health alarm – especially when similar mechanisms are observed with everyday exposures such as cooking fumes, cleaning aerosols, and urban air pollution.

    “Studying cells can be useful, but limited in what can be deduced from them. If I were to pour coffee on cells in a lab, they would die. Should I conclude that coffee will kill me? The answer is obviously ‘no!’”

    John Dunne, the director general of the UK Vaping Industry Association, said the misinformation in the article does a disservice to the millions of people using vapes to quit smoking.  

    “The NHS, the Royal College of Physicians, and the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities, all agree that vaping – while not risk-free – is significantly less harmful than smoking,” Dunne said. “Cancer Research UK, the world’s largest independent cancer charity, maintains there is ‘no good evidence’ that vaping causes cancer. [The report] is exactly this kind of confusion that threatens the nation’s smoke-free future.”  

  • U.K. Vape Industry Warns ‘Pride in Place’ Plan Could Backfire

    U.K. Vape Industry Warns ‘Pride in Place’ Plan Could Backfire

    The U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) has branded Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s new Pride in Place program “seriously flawed,” warning it risks driving ex-smokers back to cigarettes and fueling the illicit vape trade. The plan would allow residents to block new vape shops on their high streets. UKVIA Director General John Dunne said this wrongly equates specialist vape stores with betting shops and other “unwanted” outlets, despite vaping being “the most effective method of helping adult smokers quit.”

    Instead, UKVIA is urging the government to introduce a compulsory vape retail licensing scheme, funded by retailers, to keep vapes out of unsuitable venues and support tougher enforcement against rogue sellers. Dunne argued that blocking legitimate vape stores undermines the U.K.’s smoke-free targets and risks strengthening the black market.

  • UKVIA Says Disposable Ban Driving Smokers Back to Tobacco

    UKVIA Says Disposable Ban Driving Smokers Back to Tobacco

    The UK Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) says new research confirms fears that the UK’s ban on single-use vapes is backfiring, with 26% of former disposable vape users now smoking more, returning to tobacco, or buying illicit products. A survey of 6,000 vapers and smokers, commissioned by ELFBAR, also found that over half of adults (51%) wrongly believe vaping is as harmful as smoking, and awareness of illegal vapes has risen to 22%.

    UKVIA Director General John Dunne called the figures “deeply worrying,” warning that a blanket ban on disposables undermines efforts to achieve a smoke-free UK. The trade body is urging the government to launch a nationwide public health campaign on vaping’s relative safety, introduce a licensing scheme for vape retailers, reinvest licensing revenue into enforcement, and impose £10,000 fines on those selling to minors or trading illicit products.

    “It never made any sense to us to ban this entire category, and now we have concrete evidence that more than a quarter of vapers have either resumed smoking, increased tobacco use, or purchased illicit products since the ban,” Dunne said. “Any one of those outcomes would be bad enough, but all three combined should be deeply worrying and urgent action must be taken to reverse this trend. If these are the numbers we are seeing after two months, then I dread to think where we will be in a year’s time.”