Vaping History and Use
According to VapingDaily.com,
vaping is “the act of inhaling vapor produced by a vaporizer or electronic
cigarette. The vapor is produced from a material such as an e-liquid,
concentrate, or dry herb.” An important distinction from traditional “smoking”
is that vaping refers to breathing in heated water vapor, NOT the incineration
products of a burning reaction. The earliest form of vaping
traces all the way back to 440 BC, with stories of people inhaling the
resulting vapor from marijuana placed onto hot stones. The hookah, invented in
1542, is also analogous to vaping. The first true vaporizer was invented by a
Korean war veteran in 1962, although the idea for an
e-cigarette comes from 1927. The modern e-cigarette was created by a
Chinese pharmacist in 2003.
E-cigarettes (or “vapes”) work
by using a battery to heat up vaping material until it becomes an inhalable
vapor. While waxy concentrates and dry herb can be vaporized as well, vapes typically
utilize an easily vaporizable liquid such as propylene glycol or vegetable glycerin.
Flavoring and drugs, typically nicotine, can be dissolved within this liquid
for easy inhalable delivery to the user upon heating. Often, the dissolved drug
is nicotine. The presence of nicotine in these cigarettes is both functionally
useful and problematic, depending on the user. Vapes come in many sizes,
styles, and options (Figure
1). These options include various accessories and cartridges that may
contain flavoring or recreational drugs.
Figure 1: Examples of vape designs. Source: https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/basic_information/e-cigarettes/pdfs/Electronic-Cigarettes-Infographic-508.pdf
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E-cigarettes
can serve as an effective smoking cessation method. Use of nicotine
e-cigarettes resulted in 7% of regular smokers remaining abstinent from smoking
after 6 months, slightly higher than the rate from nicotine patches (5.8%) and
higher still compared to e-cigarettes without nicotine (4.1%). Additionally,
while the toxicity of vapes can vary depending on what
they contain and the mechanics of heating, the UK government declared in
2015 that use
of e-cigarettes is approximately 95% less harmful than traditional cigarettes.
Heating of vape liquid can result in exposure to various carcinogenic metals
and other toxic compounds, however vaporization is likely to produce much less
harmful volatile organic compounds than traditional cigarettes. This is likely
due to both the absence of tobacco and reduced release of chemical degradation
products that would be produced from burning.
Vaping has been on the rise
for the past several years, especially among young people. According to Pew
Research (Figure
2), the percentage of 12th graders who report having vaped at
least once in the past month doubled from less than 14% to 27% between 2016 and
2018. A similar trend was presented in a study by the New England Journal
of Medicine, which reported prevalence increases from 11.0% to 25.4% among
12th graders between 2017 and 2019 (Figure 3). While
the inclusion of nicotine in e-cigarettes can be beneficial for current smokers
aiming to quit, it is obviously problematic for young non-smokers. In addition
to promoting nicotine addiction in general, there is evidence that
e-cigarette use is associated with a much greater likelihood to begin smoking
traditional cigarettes as well (however this association cannot establish a
causal relationship).
EVALI outbreak and causes
Beyond only these concerns,
2019 brought a very concerning spike in e-cigarette or vaping product use-associated
lung injury, formally coined as EVALI. As of December 27, 2019, EVALI
has resulted in 2,561 hospitalizations and 55 deaths. While cases have been
gradually increasing since 2017, there was a sudden outbreak beginning in June
2019 prior to a decline in new cases as of September 2019. As described above,
modern e-cigarettes have been in use since 2003. Based on this timeline, what
could have been the cause? Could it simply be due to the rapid increase in
prevalence of use (Figures 2-3), or did something change about either the
e-cigarettes themselves or their content?
Figure 2: The percentage of 8th grade, 10th
grade, 12th grade, and college students who self-reported vaping
during the last month. The highest rate exists among 12th graders,
however all grades increased at a similar rate between 2016 and 2018. Source: https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/09/26/vaping-survey-data-roundup/
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Figure 3: Prevalence of nicotine vaping among adolescents
over different time intervals. Results are presented for 2017, 2018, and 2019.
Source: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc1910739
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Targeting to Youth
As would be expected, the majority
of THC vapes are purchased off the black market and therefore are likely
not subject to much quality control or oversight. Black market products are
most likely to be used by youths who do not have legal access to legal
products. Therefore, EVALI is even more concerning in that it is likely to
affect children. Even certain legal products are more likely to be used by
younger customers, including those who may have not otherwised smoked. Even
though many of the major e-cigarette companies now claim that their products
are only for adults, the use of social media advertising and fun flavors
suggests that targeting
youths was at least once an active strategy.
As discussed above,
e-cigarettes may have actual health benefits for adult smokers and remain a
potentially safer recreational option for all adults. However, in response to
the EVALI outbreak and the rapid increase in youth usage, the FDA and local
health departments have been under strong pressure to more regulate vaping
access overall. San
Francisco completely banned the sale of e-cigarettes to anyone beginning in
2020 and other localities are likely to follow. Most recently, President Trump
announced on the last day of 2019 that he was planning to ban
all e-cigarette flavoring except tobacco and menthol. Allowing these two
flavors to remain, especially menthol, was a compromise in favor of both vape
shops as well as adult customers who claim they are trying to get away from the
tobacco smell and flavor. Time will tell whether this partial ban will
adequately minimize youth vaping, however any regulation cannot prevent access
to black market products.
For an interesting
discussion with some more details on the issue from a nuanced perspective, I
highly recommend the Freakonomics
podcast episode about vaping regulation. The podcast additionally dives
into some of the nuances of previous and existing FDA regulation of
e-cigarettes, and how that actually restricts the ability of vape companies to
advertise only as a smoking cessation aid.