| Literature DB >> 31971930 |
Isaac Ghinai, Livia Navon, Jayleen K L Gunn, Lindsey M Duca, Sarah Brister, Sarah Love, Rachel Brink, Geroncio Fajardo, Jona Johnson, Lori Saathoff-Huber, Brian A King, Christopher M Jones, Vikram P Krishnasamy, Jennifer E Layden.
Abstract
In 2019, the United States experienced an outbreak of e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury (EVALI) (1). Most EVALI patients have reported using tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products obtained from informal sources (2,3), and vitamin E acetate in these products has been closely linked with EVALI (4,5). However, some EVALI patients report using only nicotine-containing products. This study compared demographic, product use, and clinical characteristics of EVALI patients in Illinois who reported using only nicotine-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products with those of patients who reported using any THC-containing products. Among 121 interviewed Illinois EVALI patients, 17 (14%) reported using only nicotine-containing products, including nine (7%) patients who had no indication of any THC use, based on self-report or toxicology testing. Compared with patients who used any THC-containing products, these nine patients were significantly more likely to be older and female and were less likely to experience constitutional symptoms or to have leukocytosis on initial evaluation. Although vitamin E acetate has been strongly linked with EVALI, evidence is not sufficient to rule out the contribution of other chemicals of concern, including chemicals in either THC- or non-THC-containing products, in some reported EVALI cases. The contributing cause or causes of EVALI for patients reporting use of only nicotine-containing products warrants further investigation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31971930 PMCID: PMC7367041 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6903e1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURECategorization of patients with confirmed and probable e-cigarette, or vaping, product use–associated lung injury (EVALI), by tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-containing product use — Illinois, July–December 2019
Demographic characteristics and use of nicotine-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products among patients with e-cigarette, or vaping, product use–associated lung injury (EVALI), by tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-containing product use — Illinois, July–December 2019
| Characteristic | No. (%) | p-value¶ | No. (%) | p-value¶ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reported THC-containing product use* (reference) | Reported no THC-containing product use† | No indication of any THC use§ | |||
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| Confirmed | 46/104 (44) | 2/17 (12) | 0.01 | 0/9 (0) | 0.01 |
| Probable | 58/104 (56) | 15/17 (88) | 9/9 (100) | ||
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| Female | 26/104 (25) | 7/17 (41) | 0.2 | 7/9 (78) | 0.003 |
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| 13–24 | 65/104 (63) | 7/17 (41) | 0.007 | 2/9 (22) | <0.001 |
| 25–44 | 37/104 (36) | 7/17 (41) | 4/9 (44) | ||
| 45–74 | 2/104 (2) | 3/17 (18) | 3/9 (33) | ||
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| White, non-Hispanic | 61/93 (66) | 11/16 (69) | 0.3 | 4/9 (44) | 0.06 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 6/93 (6) | 3/16 (19) | 3/9 (33) | ||
| Other, non-Hispanic | 9/93 (10) | 1/16 (6) | 1/9 (11) | ||
| Hispanic | 17/93 (18) | 1/16 (6) | 1/9 (11) | ||
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| Used nicotine product >5 times per day | 35/48†† (73) | 8/15 (53) | 0.2 | 4/8 (50) | 0.2 |
| Used more than one nicotine product | 13/55 (24) | 3/17 (18) | 0.7 | 2/9 (22) | 1.0 |
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| Vape or tobacco shop | 22/47 (47) | 10/14 (71) | 0.1 | 7/9 (78) | 0.1 |
| Convenience store | 14/47 (30) | 5/14 (36) | 0.7 | 2/9 (22) | 1.0 |
| Online | 4/47 (9) | 1/14 (7) | 1.0 | 1/9 (11) | 1.0 |
| Informal source¶¶ | 11/47 (23) | 0/14 (0) | 0.06 | 0/9 (0) | 0.2 |
* Patients who reported using THC-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products on initial structured questionnaire or follow-up interview.
† Patients who reported not using THC-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products on initial structured questionnaire and follow-up interview.
§ Subgroup of patients who reported not using THC-containing products who also had no indication of use of any other THC-containing substance (e.g., reported not smoking combustible marijuana, had negative toxicology testing, if performed).
¶ P-values for comparisons, using Pearson’s chi-squared test or Fisher’s exact test (for cells with <5 observations). Statistical tests compared EVALI patients who reported THC-containing product use with EVALI patients who reported no THC-containing product use and with EVALI patients with no indication of any THC use.
** Data were not available for all variables for all patients. Differing denominators reflect missing data.
†† Only patients who used nicotine-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products and reported a frequency of use are included in the denominator.
§§ Six patients reported purchasing nicotine-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products from more than one source: vape/tobacco shop and convenience store (three) and vape/tobacco shop and online (three).
¶¶ Informal sources of nicotine-containing products include friends, family members, or from in-person or online dealers.
Clinical characteristics of patients with e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury (EVALI), by reported tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-containing product use — Illinois, July–December 2019
| Characteristic | No. (%) | p-value¶ | No. (%) | p-value¶ | |
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| Reported THC-containing product use* (reference) | Reported no THC-containing product use† | No indication of any THC use§ | |||
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| Existing respiratory condition†† | 12/61 (20) | 3/14 (21) | 1.0 | 2/7 (29) | 0.6 |
| Existing cardiovascular condition§§ | 2/61 (3) | 1/14 (7) | 0.5 | 1/7 (14) | 0.3 |
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| Any respiratory symptom¶¶ | 99/100 (99) | 16/17 (94) | 0.3 | 8/9 (89) | 0.2 |
| Any gastrointestinal symptom*** | 88/100 (88) | 14/17 (82) | 0.5 | 7/9 (78) | 0.3 |
| Any constitutional symptom††† | 96/100 (96) | 13/17 (76) | 0.02 | 5/9 (56) | 0.001 |
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| Hypoxemia (O2 saturation ≤95% on room air) | 66/104 (63) | 10/17 (59) | 0.7 | 5/9 (56) | 0.7 |
| Tachypnea (RR >20 breaths per minute) | 25/66 (38) | 7/15 (47) | 0.5 | 3/8 (38) | 1.0 |
| Tachycardia (HR >100 beats per minute) | 40/68 (59) | 7/15 (47) | 0.7 | 4/8 (50) | 0.7 |
| Fever (temperature ≥100.4°F [38°C]) | 21/65 (32) | 3/14 (21) | 0.5 | 2/8 (25) | 1.0 |
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| Leukocytosis (WBC count >11,000 per mm3) | 63/69 (91) | 9/16 (56) | 0.001 | 3/8 (38) | 0.001 |
| with >80% neutrophils | 53/63 (84) | 5/9 (56) | 0.07 | 1/3 (33) | 0.08 |
| Sodium <135 mmol/liter | 17/69 (25) | 3/16 (19) | 0.8 | 0/8 (0) | 0.2 |
| Potassium <3.5 mmol/liter | 18/68 (26) | 2/15 (13) | 0.5 | 2/7 (29) | 1.0 |
| AST or ALT >35 U/liter | 27/61 (44) | 9/13 (69) | 0.1 | 5/6 (83) | 0.1 |
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| Duration of symptoms before hospitalization (median days, range) | 7 (1–148) | 4 (0–205) | 0.04 | 3 (0–205) | 0.1 |
| Outpatient or ED visit before hospitalization | 51/64 (80) | 3/10 (30) | 0.003 | 1/4 (25) | 0.04 |
| Received glucocorticoids | 53/55 (96) | 8/10 (80) | 0.1 | 5/5 (100) | 1.0 |
| Clinical improvement documented after glucocorticoids | 16/53 (30) | 1/8 (13) | 0.4 | 0/5 (0) | 0.3 |
| Admitted to intensive care unit | 40/81 (49) | 9/17 (53) | 0.8 | 5/9 (56) | 1.0 |
| Severe outcome§§§ | 19/90 (21) | 7/17 (41) | 0.07 | 4/9 (44) | 0.2 |
Abbreviations: ALT = alanine aminotransferase; AST = aspartate aminotransferase; ED = emergency department; HR = heart rate; O2 = oxygen; RR = respiratory rate; WBC = white blood cell.
* Patients who reported using THC-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products on initial structured questionnaire or follow-up interview.
† Patients who reported not using THC-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products on initial structured questionnaire or follow-up interview.
§ Subgroup of those patients who reported not using THC-containing products who also had no indication of use of any other THC-containing substance (e.g., reported not smoking combustible marijuana, had negative toxicology testing, if performed).
¶ P-values for comparisons, using Pearson’s chi-squared test or Fisher’s exact test (for cells with <5 observations). Wilcoxon rank sum test used to compare medians. Statistical tests compared EVALI patients who reported THC-containing product use with EVALI patients who reported no THC-containing product use and with EVALI patients with no indication of any THC use.
** Data were not available for all patients. Differing denominators reflect missing data.
†† Existing respiratory conditions include asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bronchitis, previous lung cancer and obstructive sleep apnea.
§§ Existing cardiovascular conditions include ischemic heart disease, congestive heart failure and congenital heart disease.
¶¶ Respiratory symptoms include shortness of breath, any cough, pleuritic chest pain.
*** Gastrointestinal symptoms include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain.
††† Constitutional symptoms include subjective fever, chills, weight loss, fatigue/malaise.
§§§ Severe outcomes include death or respiratory failure requiring endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation.