Vaping increases odds of asthma and COPD, study finds
Inhaling heated tobacco vapor through e-cigarettes was linked to increased odds of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), conditions long demonstrated to be caused by smoking traditional, combustible cigarettes, according to new research by Johns Hopkins Medicine published in BMC Pulmonary Medicine.
Asthma, marked by inflammation of the airways and shortness of breath, affects an estimated 25 million Americans, and life-threatening episodes can be triggered easily by pollution, allergies, and smoking. COPD, which affects some 16 million Americans, describes a group of disorders including emphysema and chronic bronchitis that make it hard to breathe due to permanent damage to the lungs over time. Rates of asthma and COPD are rising worldwide, according to the World Health Organization. Most cases of COPD result from smoking traditional cigarettes.
A study published earlier this year in the Annals of Internal Medicine estimated that about 1.9 million people in the U.S. solely use e-cigarettes. Scattered reports have linked the practice to a spike in respiratory illnesses dubbed EVALI (e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury), affecting more than 2,500 people and associated with numerous deaths, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Because vaping and the products inhaled with it are still relatively new to the market, its safety remains unclear.
To shed some light on the risk, the researchers took advantage of national survey data gathered by the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System from 2016 and 2017. This annual survey, commissioned by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, consisted of telephone interviews of more than 400,000 adult participants and provides data on health-related risk behaviors and chronic medical conditions.
In the analysis, the investigators analyzed data from 402,822 people who identified themselves as never smokers, meaning they said they had smoked less than 100 combustible cigarettes in their lifetimes. Of these, 3,103 reported using e-cigarettes or vaping, and separately 34,074 people reported having asthma. The average age of e-cigarette users was 18-24. About 67 percent of e-cigarette users were men. Approximately 57 percent of e-cigarette users reported that they were white, 19 percent were Hispanic, and 12 percent were black.
Almost 11 percent of the e-cigarette users reported having asthma, compared with 8 percent of those who had never used e-cigarettes. Those people who reported being current e-cigarette users were 39 percent more likely to self-report having asthma compared with those people who said they never used e-cigarettes. Those who said they used e-cigarettes some days were 31 percent more likely, and daily users were 73 percent more likely to report asthma, compared with non-e-cigarette users.
For the study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, the researchers analyzed the same data from all the questioned participants. From the more than 700,000 interviewees, about 61 percent reported being never smokers, about 9 percent were current smokers, 30 percent were former smokers, more than 3 percent said they currently used e-cigarettes, and 2 percent said they used both e-cigarettes and smoked. The e-cigarette users were more likely to fall in the age range of 30-34, almost 60 percent were men, 72 percent identified as white, 8 percent as black, 3.5 percent as Asian, and 11 percent as Hispanic.
Of those who said they used e-cigarettes, about 11 percent said they had chronic bronchitis, emphysema or COPD, compared with 5.6 percent of people who said they had never used e-cigarettes. Among never smokers, current e-cigarette users were 75 percent more likely to report having COPD, compared with those who had never used them. Those who said they used both e-cigarettes and smoked cigarettes were almost six times more likely to report having COPD, compared with those who had never used either, whereas just using combustible cigarettes alone increased the odds by three times.
For both studies, the researchers caution that they weren't designed to show that vaping directly causes lung disease, but only whether doing so was associated with an increased likelihood of having disease. The researchers also didn't distinguish between vaping tobacco compared with cannabis. They also cautioned that self-reports via telephone surveys may not be wholly reliable. However, they say their findings demonstrate the need for continued research with e-cigarette users over time to confirm and clarify the risks.
"As a physician, I am most worried about those who use both e-cigarettes and combustible cigarettes because they may end up taking in the most nicotine, which may do the most damage," says Albert Osei, MD, MPH, a postdoctoral fellow at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and lead author on the study. "Through public health campaigns, we finally had smoking levels down in some populations, but now with the current vaping epidemic, I foresee a whole new previously tobacco-naïve, young generation becoming dependent on nicotine if we do not intensify public health education efforts."
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