Many parents and pediatricians worry about the appeal of electronic cigarettes to teenagers. And they are not alone. Back in March 2017, for instance, Terry Gordon was contacted by a high school junior about ideas for a science fair project. At one point, the boy mentioned his concern about vaping in the school’s restrooms.“A light bulb went off pretty quickly,” recalls Gordon, a professor of environmental medicine at New York University (NYU) Grossman School of Medicine. “We decided to take some air measurements to see if vaping was harmful for kids who do not do it themselves.”With support from administrators and teachers, the Board of Education, and the Parent Teacher Association, Gordon’s team eventually installed air monitors in the restrooms at one high school and one middle school. The vaping-associated nicotine levels the researchers measured in these restrooms were similar to those in New York City public housing units where residents smoked heavily, says Gordon.1The jury is still out on whether e-cigarettes are as effective as, or superior to, nicotine replacement therapy to help quit smoking.2 To date, no e-cigarette has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a smoking cessation aid.3Although e-cigarettes may not expose users to all of the toxicants produced by tobacco combustion, the health risks associated with exposure to e-cigarette aerosols are not well characterized.4 This means harm reduction in smokers who switch to e-cigarettes should be weighed against the potential risk to nonsmokers who find vaping much more appealing—and perceive it as safer—than cigarette smoking.The percentage of high schoolers reporting recent e-cigarette use increased from 1.5% in 2011 to 27.5% in 2019.26 The rapid increase in youth vaping is one reason the FDA is cracking down on manufacturers targeting young consumers with kid-friendly marketing. Image: CC BY 4.0 (cropped original).The 2019 outbreak of so-called “e-cigarette, or vaping, product use associated lung injury” (EVALI) in the United States also affected many young individuals; more than half were under age 25.5 Although likely caused by vitamin E acetate added mainly to THC-containing vapes,5 the event intensified public concern about a simultaneous youth vaping epidemic, supported by growing scientific evidence that e-cigarettes are far from safe.6
Combustible Cigarettes vs. E-Cigarettes
E-cigarettes contain a battery-powered heating element, usually a metal coil, that heats an “e-liquid” mixture of solvents, nicotine, and flavoring chemicals. Users inhale the resulting aerosols into their lungs. Manufacturers are not required to publicly disclose the ingredients in e-liquids (although they must report them to the FDA), and substantial discrepancies exist between the labeled and actual nicotine content of many brands.7,8,9,10E-cigarettes appeared on the U.S. market in 2006.11 Their designs have changed substantially over time. The first-generation “cigalike” models resemble real cigarettes; pen-like second-generation devices have rechargeable batteries and refillable cartridges; third-generation “mods” have larger tanks with variable voltage settings and other adjustable features; and the smaller fourth-generation e-cigarettes, including JUUL®, have disposable or refillable pods but few, if any, manually adjustable settings.11Yet, despite this complex and heterogeneous market, the bottom line is simple. “An e-cigarette is really nothing more than a chemical reactor,” says Thomas Eissenberg, a professor of health psychology at Virginia Commonwealth University. The device power, measured in watts, is a function of battery voltage and coil resistance. Many e-cigarettes operate between 5 and 10 W, up to 200 W.12 And the power of the device, according to Eissenberg, may have the largest influence on a user’s exposure to nicotine and other toxicants. “The more energy you throw into the reactor, the more likely is the thermal degradation of e-liquid components into harmful chemicals,” he says.Because high-power devices aerosolize much more liquid per puff,13,14,15 plasma nicotine levels can rise rapidly during vaping. Some studies have shown that one e-cigarette can deliver as much or, in some cases, even more nicotine than a combustible cigarette.16,17 In addition, some brands, most notably JUUL®, use smooth-tasting protonated nicotine (“nicotine salt”) in their e-liquids.18 Conjugating nicotine with a weak acid produces nicotine salt, which creates a much more palatable aerosol than the harsh-tasting alkaline free-base (unprotonated) nicotine.10 There is also evidence that nicotine salt formulations are associated with increased nicotine yields or exposure19,20 and faster nicotine absorption.21Much of the decline in U.S. smoking in the last few decades has been attributed to tobacco control measures such as cigarette taxes, smoking bans, and health educational campaigns.22 In the United State, more than 55% of men and 35% of women smoked in the 1960s, whereas only 13.7% of adults smoked in 2018.23 Globally, the estimated global age-standardized prevalence of daily smoking in 2015 was 25.0% in men and 5.4% in women.24 Most countries whose smoking prevalence in men significantly exceeded the global average are located in central and eastern Europe, China, and southeast Asia. For women, the smoking prevalence is higher than average in western and central Europe.24Among U.S. high school students, smoking prevalence has fallen since 2011.25 Meanwhile, the percentage of high schoolers reporting recent e-cigarette use increased from 1.5% in 2011 to 27.5% in 2019.26 In addition, 10.5% of middle school students reported current vaping, making e-cigarettes the most popular nicotine delivery device among U.S. youth.26 Although only 3.2% of adults said they vaped occasionally or daily in 2018,23 an upward trend for adults has also been reported.27JUUL® e-cigarettes, introduced in 2015, have experienced an especially dramatic rise in popularity. By 2019, 59% and 54% of U.S. high school and middle school e-cigarette users, respectively, named JUUL® as their usual brand.26 Its sleek and easy-to-conceal design18 and the targeted marketing of its appealing flavors (which has recently come under regulatory scrutiny28) have made the brand highly popular with teens.18,29Surveys have shown that the availability of different flavors is among the most attractive features of e-cigarettes in this age group.30 Teenage vaping, in turn, has been shown to increase the likelihood of smoking, with or without concurrent e-cigarette use, later in life.31,32,33 A review study found that adolescents, males, and white people are more likely than other groups to consume e-cigarettes in the United States and several other countries.34 Compared with cigarettes, e-cigarettes have unique toxicological profiles for metals, solvents, and flavoring chemicals.35 Evidence of harm has been reported for all three of these categories.
The solvents in e-liquid are typically a mixture of propylene glycol (PG) and vegetable glycerol (VG) at variable ratios.10 Researchers have raised concern about the inhalation toxicity of these solvents alone, even without nicotine and flavoring chemicals.35When PG and VG are exposed to heat, breakdown products include three aldehydes: formaldehyde, acrolein, and acetaldehyde.53,54 Part of the larger class of carbonyls, these toxicants are also found in tobacco smoke. Some e-cigarette aerosols contain formaldehyde hemiacetals, a recently discovered form of formaldehyde that may deposit more deeply in the lungs than gaseous formaldehyde.53,55Solvent mixtures on the current market span the range from 100% PG, to 50/50, to 100% VG.10 Studies showed that e-liquids with a higher VG content produce more formaldehyde and acrolein than those with more PG, especially at high power settings. This might expose e-cigarette users to higher aldehyde levels than smokers10,56,57,58 and is a concern for “cloud chasers,” who prefer VG-heavy e-liquids for the large visible clouds they produce.10 A higher PG content, on the other hand, was shown to enhance nicotine delivery to the blood, potentially accelerating the development of addiction.59Manufacturers and vapers mix the solvents propylene glycol and vegetable glycerol (also known as vegetable glycerin or glycerine) in different proportions to achieve desired effects from e-liquids. These include the intensity of the flavors, the strength of the “throat hit” (or sensation from inhaling nicotine), and the size of the resulting vapor cloud.112 Image: CC0 Public Domain.In a detailed analysis of solvents, researchers subjected groups of mice for four months to one of four exposure categories: aerosol from a 60 PG/40 VG mixture, with or without nicotine; cigarette smoke; or room air.60 Unlike the smoke-exposed animals, the aerosol-exposed mice did not develop lung inflammation or emphysema. However, they did experience alterations of lung epithelial and resident immune cells that made them more susceptible to influenza infections than the mice breathing room air.PG and VG additives are generally recognized as safe for use as emulsifiers in foods.61,62 They are also used in cosmetics. When inhaled, however, their emulsifying properties seemed to promote an accumulation of distinct lipids in pulmonary cells that was not observed in mice exposed to tobacco smoke.60 The study’s findings were novel but consistent with previously reported changes in human lung tissue exposed to solvent aerosol alone.63,64 The authors concluded that their findings “raise alarm about the potential deleterious effects that [e-cigarettes] may have on the alveoli”60 and called for additional toxicity studies of inhaled solvents.
Flavoring Chemicals and Interactions with Solvents
Authors: Matthew C Madison; Cameron T Landers; Bon-Hee Gu; Cheng-Yen Chang; Hui-Ying Tung; Ran You; Monica J Hong; Nima Baghaei; Li-Zhen Song; Paul Porter; Nagireddy Putluri; Ramiro Salas; Brian E Gilbert; Ilya Levental; Matthew J Campen; David B Corry; Farrah Kheradmand Journal: J Clin Invest Date: 2019-10-01 Impact factor: 14.808
Authors: Grant O'Connell; John D Pritchard; Chris Prue; Joseph Thompson; Thomas Verron; Donald Graff; Tanvir Walele Journal: Intern Emerg Med Date: 2019-02-02 Impact factor: 3.397
Authors: Maciej L Goniewicz; Danielle M Smith; Kathryn C Edwards; Benjamin C Blount; Kathleen L Caldwell; Jun Feng; Lanqing Wang; Carol Christensen; Bridget Ambrose; Nicolette Borek; Dana van Bemmel; Karen Konkel; Gladys Erives; Cassandra A Stanton; Elizabeth Lambert; Heather L Kimmel; Dorothy Hatsukami; Stephen S Hecht; Raymond S Niaura; Mark Travers; Charles Lawrence; Andrew J Hyland Journal: JAMA Netw Open Date: 2018-12-07