| Literature DB >> 32230711 |
Anna Tzortzi1,2, Melpo Kapetanstrataki1, Vaso Evangelopoulou1, Panagiotis Beghrakis1,2,3.
Abstract
Following the recent electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) illness outbreak, the current review aimed to collect all related clinical cases for study and analysis and provide a critical synopsis of the proposed injury mechanism. Adhering to PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis) guidelines, e-cigarette-related clinical cases were identified via Google Scholar and PubMed databases. Additionally, references of published case reports and previous review papers were manually searched, revealing 159 publications presenting e-cigarette-related case reports and 19 reports by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 238 individual cases were identified; 53% traumatic injuries due to e-cigarette explosion or self-combustion, 24% respiratory cases, and 12% poisonings. Additional cases pertained to oral, cardiovascular, immunologic, hematologic, allergic reactions, infant complications, and altered medication levels. Case reports were mainly published between 2016-2019 (78%). The oldest case, a lipoid pneumonia, was published in 2012. The current review showed that e-cigarette-related health effects extend beyond the acute lung injury syndrome, including traumatic, thermal injuries and acute intoxications. Physicians should be aware of the distinct clinical presentations and be trained to respond and treat effectively. Regulators and public health authorities should address the regulatory gap regarding electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) and novel tobacco products.Entities:
Keywords: VAPI; e-cigarette explosion; e-vaping acute lung injury (EVALI); electronic cigarette; nicotine intoxication; vaping
Year: 2020 PMID: 32230711 PMCID: PMC7177608 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17072248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart of the process to identify and screen published case reports of e-cigarette-related illness and injury.
Figure 2Classification by type of injury of e-cigarette-related case reports.
Type of injury by geographical location.
| Type of Injury | USA | UK | EU-Other | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory | 36 (88%) | 1 (2%) | - | 4 (10%) |
| Traumatic injury | 32 (76%) | 5 (12%) | 3 (7%) | 2 (5%) |
| Poisoning | 6 (24%) | 2 (8%) | 9 (36%) | 8 (32%) |
| Allergy | 1 (25%) | 2 (50%) | 1 (25%) | - |
| Effect on medication metabolism and plasma levels | 2 (67%) | - | 1 (33%) | - |
| Ulcerative colitis | 1 (50%) | - | 1 (50%) | - |
| Misuse of e-liquid | - | - | 2 (100%) | - |
| Injury caused by falling with e-cigarette in mouth | 1 (100%) | - | - | - |
| Additional diagnoses and health effects attributed to electronic cigarette use | 5 (38%) | 4 (31%) | 2 (15%) | 2 (15%) |
Respiratory cases: demographic, clinical, laboratory findings, and outcome.
| Variable | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Male | 69% |
| Female | 31% |
|
| 23 (19–33) |
|
| |
| Yes | 10% |
| No | 16% |
| Unspecified | 74% |
|
| |
| Yes | 13% |
| No | 71% |
| Unspecified | 16% |
|
| |
| No medical history | 66% |
| Asthma/ Allergy | 21% |
| Other * | 14% |
|
| |
| CBD/THC | 36% |
| CBD/THC and Nicotine | 10% |
| CBD/THC and unknown liquid | 10% |
| Nicotine | 3% |
| Unknown/unspecified liquid | 40% |
|
| |
| Dyspnea | 83% |
| Cough | 59% |
| Dyspnea and Cough | 53% |
| Chest pain | 22% |
| Hemoptysis | 9% |
| Fever | 40% |
| Respiratory arrest | 5% |
| Gastrointestinal symptoms | 26% |
|
| |
| GGO | 38% |
| GGO + consolidation | 12% |
| Opacities | 10% |
| Multiple nodules | 6% |
| GGO + multiple nodules | 6% |
| Other | 28% |
|
| |
| High flow nasal cannula therapy | 18% |
| Intubation/ mechanical ventilation | 31% |
| ECMO | 15% |
| Bronchoscopy | 78% |
|
| |
| EVALI | 26% |
| Organizing pneumonia/BOOP/Respiratory bronchiolitis | 21% |
| Lipoid pneumonia | 16% |
| Eosinophilic pneumonia | 7% |
| Pneumothorax | 7% |
| Hypersensitivity pneumonitis | 5% |
| Organizing pneumonia and lipoid pneumonia | 5% |
| Asthma exacerbation | 3% |
| ARDS | 2% |
| ARDS-DAD-Organizing pneumonia | 2% |
| DAH | 2% |
| EVALI and secondary pneumothorax | 2% |
| Epiglottitis | 2% |
| Possible EVALI on asthma grounds | 2% |
|
| 73% |
| Outcome | |
| Recovered | 83% |
| Discharged but hospitalized again | 5% |
| Persisting complications | 10% |
| Deceased | 2% |
Abbreviations: CBD: Cannabidiol, THC: Tetrahydrocannabinol, GGO: Ground-glass opacities, ECMO: extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation, BOOP: Bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia, EVALI: E-Vaping Acute Lung Injury, ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome, DAD: diffuse alveolar damage, DAH: diffuse alveolar hemorrhage. * Other medical history includes: Inflammatory bowel disease, Congenital dysmorphism with thrombocytopenia, anemia, Hashmimoto’s thyroid, diabetes, cancer, seizure disorder, and hypertension.
Publications of e-cigarette case reports with cytologic and histologic findings.
| Paper | Country | Bronchoalveolar Lavage (BAL) | Transbronchial Biopsy | Open Lung Biopsy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| He et al., 2017 [ | USA | Possible DAH | Organizing pneumonia | |
| Modi et al., 2015 [ | USA | LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||
| Mantilla et al., 2016 [ | USA | No cytology information | BOOP | |
| Mukhopadhyay et al., 2019 [ | USA | Macrophage predominant | DAD (acute and organizing) | |
| None obtained | Organizing pneumonia | |||
| LLM (Oil Red O positive) | Organizing ALI | |||
| LLM (Oil Red O positive) | Organizing pneumonia | |||
| LLM (Oil Red O positive) | Organizing ALI | |||
| Macrophage predominant | Organizing pneumonia | |||
| Macrophage predominant | Organizing pneumonia | |||
| Arter et al., 2019 [ | USA | 26% eosinophils | ||
| Agustin et al., 2018 [ | USA | Recurrent DAH | ||
| Sommerfeld et al., 2018 [ | USA | LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||
| Khan et al., 2018 [ | USA | Organizing pneumonia | ||
| Flower et al., 2017 [ | Australia | Non-diagnostic | Non-diagnostic | RUL: black pigmentation and bullae |
| Thota D and Latham E, 2014 [ | USA | Negative cultures | ||
| McCauley et al., 2012 [ | USA | LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||
| Itoh et al., 2018 [ | Japan | LLM (Oil Red O positive) | Acute alveolitis intra-alveolar fibrosis | |
| Dicpinigaitis et al., 2019 [ | USA | LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||
| Landman et al., 2019 [ | Canada | Negative cultures | Non-specific acute inflammation | |
| Viswam et al., 2018 [ | UK | Pink cloudy fluid | LLM and cholesterol clefts | |
| Maddock et al., 2019 [ | USA | 49% neutrophils, >50% LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||
| ~50% LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||||
| ~30% LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||||
| ~75% LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||||
| Layden et. al, 2019 [ | USA | 78% neutrophils, some LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||
| Sharma et al., 2019 [ | USA | Lymphocytes predominance and rare eosinophils | ||
| Pokhrel et al., 2019 [ | USA | LLM predominance | ||
| Neutrophil predominance | ||||
| LLM predominance | ||||
| Abeles et al., 2019 [ | USA | 51% PMN, negative cultures, rare LLMs | ||
| Casanova et al. 2019 [ | USA | 55% LLMs | ||
| Ocampo-Gonzalez and Park, 2019 [ | USA | 80% LLM (Oil Red O positive) | ||
| Attis et al., 2018 [ | USA | Macrophage predominance | ||
| Aftab et al., 2019 [ | USA | 91% neutrophils | ||
| Buus et al., 2019 [ | USA | Macrophages/ neutrophils/ lymphocytes | ||
| Lu et al., 2020 [ | USA | Ιntra-alveolar fibrin and neutrophils | ||
| Youmans et al., 2020 [ | USA | 50% monocytes, 40% lymphocytes, 10% neutrophils | Non-diagnostic | Acute and organizing DAD with foamy macrophages |
| Antwi-Amoabeng et al., 2020 [ | USA | 75% eosinophils | ||
| Ansari-Gilani et al., 2020 [ | USA | Unremarkable | Poorly define granulomas | |
| Unremarkable | ||||
| Abbara et al., 2019 [ | USA | Lipoid pneumonia |
Abbreviations: DAH: diffuse alveolar hemorrhage, LLM: lipid-laden macrophages, BOOP: Bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia, DAD: diffuse alveolar damage, ALI: acute lung injury, RUL: Right-upper lobe, PMN: polymorphonuclear.