Cardio Health Nicotine in All its Forms is Toxic to the Heart and Blood Vessels
Source: Press release
ESC
4 min Reading Time
A new report has revealed that nicotine in all its forms: Vapes, pouches, heated tobacco, shisha, and cigarettes are all toxic to the heart and blood vessels. The experts of the report call for urgent action to curb the growing number of adolescents and young people in Europe becoming addicted to nicotine.
Nicotine is toxic to the heart and blood vessels, regardless of whether it is consumed via a vape, a pouch, a shisha or a cigarette, according to an expert consensus report published in the European Heart Journal recently.
(Source: Pixabay)
Sophia Antipolis/France – Nicotine is toxic to the heart and blood vessels, regardless of whether it is consumed via a vape, a pouch, a shisha or a cigarette, according to an expert consensus report published in the European Heart Journal recently. The report brings together the results of the entire literature in the field and is the first to consider the harms of all nicotine products, rather than smoking only.
The report highlights a dramatic rise in the use of vapes, heated tobacco and nicotine pouches, particularly among adolescents and young adults, with evidence that three-quarters of young adult vapers have never smoked before.
The authors of the report are calling for urgent action to curb the growing number of adolescents and young people becoming addicted to nicotine, particularly a ban on flavours and social media and influencer advertising, and effective taxation and regulation across all nicotine products.
The report was written by Professor Thomas Münzel from University Medical Centre, Mainz, Germany, Professor Filippo Crea from Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy, Professor Sanjay Rajagopalan from Case Western Reserve School of Medicine, Cleveland, USA, and Professor Thomas F. Lüscher from Royal Brompton & Harefield Hospitals, London, UK, President of the European Society of Cardiology.
The paper comes at a critical regulatory turning point, following the European Commission’s revised Tobacco Taxation Directive, which for the first time introduces a minimum tax on e-liquids, heated tobacco and nicotine pouches.
Key findings of the expert consensus report:
Nicotine is a potent cardiovascular toxin, causing damage to the heart and blood vessels, regardless of the delivery system.
No nicotine-containing product is safe for blood vessels or the heart. This includes e-cigarettes, heated tobacco, waterpipes, cigars and oral nicotine pouches.
Youth addiction is rising rapidly, fuelled by flavours, social media marketing and regulatory loopholes.
Passive exposure to smoke, vape and heated tobacco emissions also causes vascular harm.
Vapes and pouches are not effective cessation tools, but rather are an entry point to smoking and often lead to dual use (alongside cigarettes).
Nicotine-related illness cost hundreds of billions of Euros in healthcare and productivity losses every year.
Policy gaps persist across Europe, enabling new nicotine products to avoid taxation, packaging rules and public-use restrictions.
However, the researchers caution that the longer-term effects of newer tobacco products are not yet known, so more research is needed to fully understand their impacts. They also acknowledge that many people use cigarettes alongside other nicotine products, making it harder to pinpoint the effects of the individual nicotine products.
The report’s authors call for:
Flavour bans for all nicotine products
Taxation on all nicotine products that is proportional to nicotine content
Plain packaging for all nicotine products
Comprehensive indoor and outdoor smoke- and aerosol-free laws
Strict online sales controls and social media advertising bans
Integration of nicotine prevention into cardiovascular care
National cardiovascular prevention plans that explicitly address nicotine
Professor Münzel said: “Nicotine is not a harmless stimulant; it is a direct cardiovascular toxin. Across cigarettes, vapes, heated tobacco, and nicotine pouches, we consistently see increased blood pressure, damage to blood vessels and a higher risk of heart disease. No product that delivers nicotine is safe for the heart.
“Our findings show that nicotine by itself, even without the multitude of toxic combustion products, tar, or free radicals present in cigarette smoke, drives cardiovascular damage.
“The narrative of ‘safer nicotine’ must end. Europe urgently needs unified regulation that covers all nicotine products, especially to protect adolescents, who are now the primary targets of aggressive marketing. Otherwise, we risk losing an entire generation to nicotine addiction.
“The next heart attack, the next stroke, the next cardiovascular death may not come from a cigarette, but from a flavoured pod, a nicotine pouch, or a waterpipe in a café. If Europe fails to act now, we will face the largest nicotine addiction wave since the 1950s.”
Professor Crea added: “Our knowledge of cardiovascular risk keeps evolving. Obviously, we must abate the well-known traditional risk factors including hypertension, diabetes, obesity and smoking. Traditional risk factors are only responsible for around half of cardiovascular disease. The remaining half is explained by emerging risk factors including pollution, depression and infections.
“Use of nicotine, in any form, also contributes to this cardiovascular risk. Cardiovascular disease remains the number one killer, so a strong, comprehensive call to action is needed.”
Professor Lüscher said: “This paper is a wake-up call for regulators. The shift from cigarettes to e-cigarettes and flavoured pouches is no effective harm reduction; it is rather a transformation of addiction strategies.”
“We need political action. Flavour bans, effective taxation, comprehensive advertising restrictions, and the inclusion of vaping and heated tobacco in all smoke-free laws are no longer optional – these are essential measures to prevent cardiovascular disease.” “Science is clear: the cardiovascular toxicity of nicotine is evidence-based by now. The duty now lies with legislators to protect the public, especially children, from a new epidemic of addiction and disease.”
Date: 08.12.2025
Naturally, we always handle your personal data responsibly. Any personal data we receive from you is processed in accordance with applicable data protection legislation. For detailed information please see our privacy policy.
Consent to the use of data for promotional purposes
I hereby consent to Vogel Communications Group GmbH & Co. KG, Max-Planck-Str. 7-9, 97082 Würzburg including any affiliated companies according to §§ 15 et seq. AktG (hereafter: Vogel Communications Group) using my e-mail address to send editorial newsletters. A list of all affiliated companies can be found here
Newsletter content may include all products and services of any companies mentioned above, including for example specialist journals and books, events and fairs as well as event-related products and services, print and digital media offers and services such as additional (editorial) newsletters, raffles, lead campaigns, market research both online and offline, specialist webportals and e-learning offers. In case my personal telephone number has also been collected, it may be used for offers of aforementioned products, for services of the companies mentioned above, and market research purposes.
Additionally, my consent also includes the processing of my email address and telephone number for data matching for marketing purposes with select advertising partners such as LinkedIn, Google, and Meta. For this, Vogel Communications Group may transmit said data in hashed form to the advertising partners who then use said data to determine whether I am also a member of the mentioned advertising partner portals. Vogel Communications Group uses this feature for the purposes of re-targeting (up-selling, cross-selling, and customer loyalty), generating so-called look-alike audiences for acquisition of new customers, and as basis for exclusion for on-going advertising campaigns. Further information can be found in section “data matching for marketing purposes”.
In case I access protected data on Internet portals of Vogel Communications Group including any affiliated companies according to §§ 15 et seq. AktG, I need to provide further data in order to register for the access to such content. In return for this free access to editorial content, my data may be used in accordance with this consent for the purposes stated here. This does not apply to data matching for marketing purposes.
Right of revocation
I understand that I can revoke my consent at will. My revocation does not change the lawfulness of data processing that was conducted based on my consent leading up to my revocation. One option to declare my revocation is to use the contact form found at https://contact.vogel.de. In case I no longer wish to receive certain newsletters, I have subscribed to, I can also click on the unsubscribe link included at the end of a newsletter. Further information regarding my right of revocation and the implementation of it as well as the consequences of my revocation can be found in the data protection declaration, section editorial newsletter.