TOXIC TOKE –
August 20, 2025 – Cannabis smoke can seem gentler than tobacco’s, but that impression of marijuana may be deceptive. Deep in the lungs, the drug’s chemistry is far from benign, recent research suggests. Some studies have even linked heavy cannabis use to a heightened risk of some cancers, including those of the head and neck. Each lungful of cannabis smoke is a brew of the high-inducing ingredient tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), fine particulates, and certain carcinogens that are also found in tobacco. But cannabinoids may bring their own twist by quietly rewiring the lungs’ immune settings.
“The airway’s protective lining weakens, antiviral signals falter, and inflammation flares,” said Raphael Cuomo, a scientist working at the intersection of cancer prevention and addiction at the University of California, San Diego. In one study with mice, cannabis smoke dulled both tumor-fighting and infection defenses. In another, THC blunted the effects of immunotherapy, weakening tumor-killing immune cells in the body.Cannabis also triggers other changes in the immune system, according to studies in humans, cells and lab mice. In the airways, levels of proteins tied to inflammation spike when cannabis is used consistently. A protein called MUC5AC, which lines and protects the respiratory tract, is made in excess in certain cells, hinting at early tissue changes. Cannabis smoke can skew the enzymes that maintain tissue and switch off genes that respond to toxins.


