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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

Secondhand Smoke Deposits Cancer-Causing Cadmium in the Body, Study Finds

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
June 15, 2026
in Cancer
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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A groundbreaking study from Texas A&M University’s School of Public Health has unveiled a significant and troubling link between secondhand cigarette smoke exposure and elevated levels of the toxic metal cadmium in adults. This research, published in the journal Biological Trace Element Research, illuminates how cadmium accumulates in the body not only through active smoking but also via passive inhalation of tobacco smoke, challenging long-held perceptions about the risks of secondhand smoke.

Cadmium, a heavy metal notorious for its toxicity and carcinogenic properties, has long been established as a hazardous component of cigarette smoke. Traditionally, the focus has largely been on active smokers and their heightened risk of cadmium poisoning. However, this new investigation reveals that adults who merely breathe in secondhand cigarette smoke carry approximately 1.5 times the cadmium burden in their blood compared to individuals residing in smoke-free environments. This finding indicates that passive exposure is far from benign and carries substantial health implications.

Dr. Nandita Sarker, the study’s lead author and a doctoral candidate in Environmental and Occupational Health, emphasizes the significance of these findings by explaining that cadmium accumulates progressively over time within the body’s tissues. “Cadmium is a silent intruder,” Sarker notes. “Its presence is insidious because it builds up gradually and can lead to severe diseases including cancers of the kidney, lung, and prostate.” The study thus highlights a critical aspect of environmental health risk that has previously been underestimated.

This extensive research analyzed biomarker data collected from a representative cross-section of the U.S. population between 2015 and 2020. By assessing cadmium concentrations in both blood and urine samples from 3,686 adults and 1,380 children and teenagers, the researchers aimed to capture both immediate and long-term exposure metrics. Blood levels serve as indicators of recent cadmium exposure, whereas urinary levels reflect cumulative, chronic accumulation due to cadmium’s tendency to be retained in the kidneys for several decades.

A pivotal methodological feature of this study was the concurrent measurement of cotinine—a metabolite of nicotine widely regarded as a reliable biomarker for tobacco smoke exposure. This approach allowed the researchers to classify participants into categories ranging from no exposure to heavy secondhand smoke exposure and active smoking. The interplay between cotinine and cadmium levels provided robust evidence confirming that tobacco smoke exposure directly correlates with toxic metal uptake in adults.

Strikingly, the investigation revealed that active smokers exhibited over three times higher blood cadmium concentrations compared to nonsmokers, underscoring the well-documented hazards of habitual tobacco use. But what sets this study apart is its revelation that nonsmokers exposed to intense secondhand smoke also displayed a substantial 1.5-fold increase in cadmium blood levels. This challenges the prevailing assumption that the dangers of passive smoking are limited mainly to respiratory illnesses rather than systemic toxic metal accumulation.

Interestingly, the study found no significant association between tobacco smoke exposure and cadmium levels in children and adolescents. This discrepancy is posited to arise from physiological factors, as cadmium accumulation is cumulative and the kidneys’ capacity to filter and retain cadmium diminishes with age. Consequently, the adult population exhibits more pronounced toxic metal buildup reflective of chronic exposure, while younger individuals may not yet show measurable increases.

The study further delves into sex-based biological differences, uncovering that females, across all age groups, had consistently higher cadmium levels than males. This phenomenon is attributed to the female digestive tract’s enhanced efficiency in absorbing cadmium and hormonal influences during menstrual cycles, pregnancy, and menopause, which appear to further affect cadmium uptake and retention.

An unsettling dimension of the research pertains to social determinants of health. The data unveiled disproportionate cadmium exposure among people belonging to racial minority groups and those with lower socioeconomic status or limited educational attainment. These disparities cannot be explained solely by smoking behaviors but rather reflect systemic inequities in housing conditions, environmental pollution, and access to health information and resources.

Specifically, individuals living in crowded, multi-unit housing with shared ventilation systems are vulnerable to secondhand smoke infiltration, and consequently, elevated cadmium exposure. Additionally, environmental contributors such as contaminated food, polluted soil, and vehicular exhaust exacerbate cadmium accumulation, disproportionately affecting disadvantaged communities unable to mitigate these risks effectively.

Dr. Taehyun Roh, a supervising expert in Epidemiology and Biostatistics, stresses the broader public health implications of these findings. “Protecting populations from tobacco smoke exposure transcends respiratory health concerns; it is imperative for minimizing cumulative exposure to toxic contaminants like cadmium that silently accumulate and contribute to chronic diseases over decades,” Roh explains. This research propels a renewed urgency for stringent smoke-free policies and targeted interventions.

Despite its robust design, the study acknowledges limitations linked to biomarker detection windows. Cotinine, with a half-life of approximately 15 to 20 hours, provides only a snapshot of recent tobacco smoke exposure, complicating distinctions between occasional smokers and those transiently exposed to smoke-filled environments. Moreover, the study could not longitudinally track cadmium intake from dietary sources over extended time frames, necessitating future long-term cohort studies to delineate causal pathways definitively.

The collaboration involved an interdisciplinary team, including researchers Garett Sansom, Nusrat Fahmida Trisha, and Nishat Tasnim Hasan, whose combined expertise in environmental health and biostatistics enriched the analytical rigor of the work. Their integration within the Texas A&M Interdisciplinary Faculty of Toxicology further emphasizes the study’s multidisciplinary approach to unraveling the complex intersections of toxic exposure and public health.

Ultimately, this pioneering study calls for heightened public awareness about the hidden risks of secondhand smoke beyond respiratory effects. It advocates for comprehensive strategies encompassing public education, environmental justice, and policy reforms aimed at reducing involuntary tobacco smoke exposure and mitigating toxic metal accumulation as a preventable cause of chronic disease and cancer.

As the scientific community advances this critical field, the present findings serve as a compelling reminder that secondhand smoke is not just a nuisance but a potent vector for toxicological harm with profound long-term health consequences. Protecting vulnerable populations from this insidious threat remains an urgent priority for both researchers and policymakers alike.

Subject of Research: People

Article Title: Association Between Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Cadmium Biomarkers in the US Population: NHANES 2015–2020

News Publication Date: 18-Apr-2026

Web References:

PubMed Study
Biological Trace Element Research

References:

Nandita Sarker et al., Association Between Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Cadmium Biomarkers in the US Population: NHANES 2015–2020, Biological Trace Element Research, 2026.

Keywords: Public health, cadmium, tobacco smoke, secondhand smoke, toxic metal exposure, biomarker analysis, environmental health, respiratory health, health disparities, chronic disease, cancer risk, tobacco-related toxicity

Tags: cadmium accumulation in adultscadmium blood levels in nonsmokerscadmium toxicity from tobacco smokecarcinogenic heavy metals in smokeenvironmental tobacco smoke effectslong-term effects of secondhand smokepassive smoking metal exposurepublic health implications of secondhand smokesecondhand smoke and cancer risksecondhand smoke health riskstobacco smoke pollution health impacttoxic metal exposure from passive smoking

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