| Literature DB >> 31581166 |
Isaac Ghinai, Ian W Pray, Livia Navon, Kevin O'Laughlin, Lori Saathoff-Huber, Brooke Hoots, Anne Kimball, Mark W Tenforde, Jennifer R Chevinsky, Mark Layer, Ngozi Ezike, Jonathan Meiman, Jennifer E Layden.
Abstract
In July 2019, the Illinois Department of Public Health and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services launched a coordinated epidemiologic investigation after receiving reports of several cases of lung injury in previously healthy persons who reported electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) use, or vaping (1). This report describes features of e-cigarette product use by patients in Illinois and Wisconsin. Detailed patient interviews were conducted by telephone, in person, or via the Internet with 86 (68%) of 127 patients. Overall, 75 (87%) of 86 interviewed patients reported using e-cigarette products containing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), and 61 (71%) reported using nicotine-containing products. Numerous products and brand names were identified by patients. Nearly all (96%) THC-containing products reported were packaged, prefilled cartridges, and 89% were primarily acquired from informal sources (e.g., friends, family members, illicit dealers, or off the street). In contrast, 77% of nicotine-containing products were sold as prefilled cartridges, and 83% were obtained from commercial vendors. The precise source of this outbreak is currently unknown (2); however, the predominant use of prefilled THC-containing cartridges among patients with lung injury associated with e-cigarette use suggests that they play an important role. While this investigation is ongoing, CDC recommends that persons consider refraining from using e-cigarette, or vaping, products, particularly those containing THC. Given the diversity of products reported and frequency of patients using both THC- and nicotine-containing e-cigarette products, additional methods such as product testing and traceback could help identify the specific cause of this outbreak.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31581166 PMCID: PMC6776374 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6839e2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Patient characteristics by type of electronic cigarette, or vaping, product used in the 3 months prior to illness onset — Illinois and Wisconsin, 2019
| Characteristic | n/N (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| THC-containing products only (N = 25) | Nicotine-containing products only (N = 11) | Both THC- and nicotine-containing products (N = 50) | Total (N = 86) | |
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| <18 | 5/25 (20) | 3/11 (27) | 11/50 (22) |
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| 18–24 | 7/25 (28) | 4/11 (36) | 27/50 (54) |
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| 25–34 | 7/25 (28) | 3/11 (27) | 9/50 (18) |
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| ≥35 | 6/25 (24) | 1/11 (9) | 3/50 (6) |
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| Male | 22/25 (88) | 8/11 (73) | 38/50 (76) |
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| Female | 3/25 (12) | 3/11 (27) | 12/50 (24) |
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| White, non-Hispanic† | 13/22 (59) | 8/11 (73) | 39/46 (85) |
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| Black, non-Hispanic† | 2/22 (9) | 2/11 (18) | 3/46 (7) |
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| Other, non-Hispanic† | 0/22 (0) | 0/11 (0) | 2/46 (4) |
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| Hispanic† | 7/22 (32) | 1/11 (9) | 2/46 (4) |
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| Admitted to ICU§ | 12/19 (63) | 5/8 (63) | 25/44 (57) |
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| Smoked combustible marijuana¶ | 12/24 (50) | 5/11 (45) | 26/48 (54) |
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| Smoked combustible tobacco¶ | 3/24 (13) | 4/11 (36) | 13/48 (27) |
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Abbreviations: ICU = intensive care unit; THC = tetrahydrocannabinol.
* Information missing for seven patients.
† Blacks, whites, and persons of other races were non-Hispanic; Hispanic persons could be of any race.
§ Information missing for 15 patients.
¶ Information missing for three patients.
Electronic cigarette (e-cigarette), or vaping, product use behaviors in the 3 months prior to illness onset in patients with lung injury associated with e-cigarette use — Illinois and Wisconsin, 2019
| Product use and behaviors | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Illinois (n = 48) | Wisconsin (n = 38) | Total (N = 86) | |
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| Any use | 39 (81) | 36 (95) |
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| Exclusive use | 13 (27) | 12 (32) |
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| Dank Vapes use | 33 (73) | 24 (63) |
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| Any use | 35 (73) | 26 (68) |
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| Exclusive use | 9 (19) | 2 (5) |
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| 26 (54) | 24 (63) |
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| THC-containing products | 29 (60) | 20 (53) |
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| Nicotine-containing products | 27 (56) | 18 (47) |
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| Device designed for prefilled cartridge use | 43 (91) | 35 (92) |
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| Tank designed to be filled with product | 7 (15) | 11 (29) |
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| Dab rig or a dab pen | 7 (15) | 7 (18) |
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| THC brands per THC user,§ mean (range) | 2.1 (1–7) | 2.1 (1–7) |
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| Nicotine brands per nicotine user,¶ mean (range) | 1.3 (1–3) | 1.3 (1–4) |
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| No./total of THC products (%) that were packaged, prefilled cartridges | 69/72 (96) | 80/83 (96) |
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| No./total of nicotine products (%) that were packaged, prefilled cartridges | 32/35 (91) | 29/44 (66) |
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Abbreviation: THC = tetrahydrocannabinol.
* The denominator used here is all patients, not just those who reported using THC- or nicotine-containing products.
Patients could report using more than one type of device or product, thus the percentage totals sum to >100%.
§ Patients were counted as THC users if they reported use of at least one THC-containing e-cigarette product in the past 3 months.
¶ Patients were counted as nicotine users if they reported use of at least one nicotine-containing e-cigarette product in the past 3 months.
FIGUREFrequently reported brand names of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)- and nicotine-containing electronic cigarette (e-cigarette), or vaping, products*,†,§ reported by patients with lung injury¶ — Illinois and Wisconsin, 2019
* Two brands of cannabidiol are not shown (each brand reported by one patient).
† 30 other THC-containing brands (including three brands of THC wax for “dabbing”) were only reported by one patient each.
§ 22 other nicotine-containing brands were only reported by one patient each.
¶ Data are presented from interviews conducted with 86 of 127 patients with lung injury associated with e-cigarette use, or vaping.