Nature Medicine Publishes Article on Long-Term Health Risks of E-Cigarettes After Smoking Cessation
A new Nature Medicine article from IARC-WHO and UCSF researchers addresses long-term health risks of e-cigarette use following smoking cessation. Full content is not yet available.
Summary
Researchers from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (WHO) and UC San Francisco have published an article in Nature Medicine titled 'Long-term health risks of e-cigarettes after smoking cessation.' The article appeared online ahead of print on June 22, 2026. Beyond the title and author affiliations, no abstract, results, or methodological details are available in the source provided for this summary. The topic is highly relevant to clinicians and patients considering e-cigarettes as a long-term substitute after quitting smoking, but any specific conclusions, risk estimates, or recommendations cannot be reported here without access to the full text.
Detailed Summary
An article titled 'Long-term health risks of e-cigarettes after smoking cessation' was published online ahead of print in Nature Medicine on June 22, 2026. The authors are Mahdi Sheikh of the Early Detection, Prevention, and Infections Branch at the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC-WHO) in Lyon, France, and Pamela M. Ling of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at UC San Francisco.
The source material available for this summary consists only of the citation, title, author affiliations, and a conflict-of-interest statement (the authors declare none). No abstract, results, methods, figures, or conclusions are included. As a result, no specific findings can be reported, and any characterization of what the article concludes about e-cigarette risks would be speculative.
The topic itself is of substantial public health importance. Many smokers who quit have adopted e-cigarettes as either a cessation aid or a long-term substitute, and whether continued vaping after cessation carries meaningful independent health risks remains an active area of investigation. The author affiliations — IARC-WHO's cancer prevention branch and UCSF's tobacco control center — indicate expertise in tobacco-related disease epidemiology and policy, but readers should not infer the content or conclusions of the article from author affiliation or journal venue alone.
It is also unclear from the citation alone whether this publication is an original research article, a review, a commentary, or a perspective piece. Nature Medicine publishes all of these formats. A full assessment of the article's evidence, methodology, and implications requires access to the full text.
Key Findings
- An article on long-term health risks of e-cigarettes after smoking cessation was published in Nature Medicine on June 22, 2026.
- Authors are affiliated with IARC-WHO (Lyon, France) and UCSF's Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education.
- No abstract or results are available in the source material provided; specific findings cannot be reported.
- The article format (original research, review, or commentary) cannot be determined from the citation alone.
- The authors declare no competing interests.
Methodology
No methodological information is available from the source material. Only the title, authors, affiliations, journal, and publication date are provided. The article type (original research, review, perspective, or commentary) is not specified in the citation.
Study Limitations
This summary is based solely on the citation, title, and author affiliations; no abstract or article text was available. Specific findings, study design, sample, outcomes, effect sizes, and conclusions are entirely unknown from the source. Any characterization of the article's claims beyond its title would be speculative.
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