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A 22-year-old woman from Manchester has been told she has about 18 months to live after a lung cancer diagnosis she and doctors link to years of vaping.
Kayley Boda began using reusable vapes at 15 and switched to disposable devices shortly before symptoms began.
In January 2025 she started coughing up dark brown, grainy mucus and was turned away by clinicians eight times who diagnosed chest infections.
After coughing blood in March 2025 she had a chest X-ray and, following seven biopsies, was told in August 2025 she had stage one lung cancer.
Surgery in September 2025 to remove the lower lobe of her right lung upstaged the disease to stage three when six lymph nodes tested positive.
She underwent chemotherapy and was given the all clear in February 2026, but a pleural effusion two months later revealed the cancer had returned in the lung lining.
Boda is fundraising for a clinical trial in Germany and has urged others to stop vaping.
Doctors say they cannot definitively prove the cause but that smoking and vaping would not have helped her condition.







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