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E-Cigarette Use, Small Airway Fibrosis, and Constrictive Bronchiolitis.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Hariri, LP; Flashner, BM; Kanarek, DJ; O'Donnell, WJ; Soskis, A; Ziehr, DR; Frank, A; Nandy, S; Berigei, SR; Sharma, A; Mathisen, D; Keyes, CM ...
Published in: NEJM Evid
June 2022

BACKGROUND: Vaping, including the use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes), has become increasingly prevalent, yet the associated long-term health risks are largely unknown. Given the prevalence of use, particularly among adolescents early in their lifespan, it is vital to understand the potential chronic pathologic sequelae of vaping. METHODS: We present the cases of four patients with chronic lung disease associated with e-cigarette use characterized by clinical evaluation, with pulmonary function tests (PFTs), chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT), endobronchial optical coherence tomography (EB-OCT) imaging, and histopathologic assessment. RESULTS: Each patient presented with shortness of breath and chest pain in association with a 3- to 8-year history of e-cigarette use, with mild progressive airway obstruction on PFTs and/or chest HRCT findings demonstrating evidence of air trapping and bronchial wall thickening. EB-OCT imaging performed in two patients showed small airway-centered fibrosis with bronchiolar narrowing and lumen irregularities. The predominant histopathologic feature on surgical lung biopsy was small airway-centered fibrosis, including constrictive bronchiolitis and MUC5AC overexpression in all patients. Patients who ceased vaping had a partial, but not complete, reversal of disease over 1 to 4 years. CONCLUSIONS: After thorough evaluation for other potential etiologies, vaping was considered to be the most likely common causal etiology for all patients due to the temporal association of symptomatic chronic lung disease with e-cigarette use and partial improvement in symptoms after e-cigarette cessation. In this series, we associate the histopathologic pattern of small airway-centered fibrosis, including constrictive bronchiolitis, with vaping, potentially defining a clinical and pathologic entity associated with e-cigarette use. (Funded in part by the National Institutes of Health.).

Duke Scholars

Published In

NEJM Evid

DOI

EISSN

2766-5526

Publication Date

June 2022

Volume

1

Issue

6

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Hariri, L. P., Flashner, B. M., Kanarek, D. J., O’Donnell, W. J., Soskis, A., Ziehr, D. R., … Christiani, D. C. (2022). E-Cigarette Use, Small Airway Fibrosis, and Constrictive Bronchiolitis. NEJM Evid, 1(6). https://doi.org/10.1056/evidoa2100051
Hariri, Lida P., Bess M. Flashner, David J. Kanarek, Walter J. O’Donnell, Alyssa Soskis, David R. Ziehr, Angela Frank, et al. “E-Cigarette Use, Small Airway Fibrosis, and Constrictive Bronchiolitis.NEJM Evid 1, no. 6 (June 2022). https://doi.org/10.1056/evidoa2100051.
Hariri LP, Flashner BM, Kanarek DJ, O’Donnell WJ, Soskis A, Ziehr DR, et al. E-Cigarette Use, Small Airway Fibrosis, and Constrictive Bronchiolitis. NEJM Evid. 2022 Jun;1(6).
Hariri, Lida P., et al. “E-Cigarette Use, Small Airway Fibrosis, and Constrictive Bronchiolitis.NEJM Evid, vol. 1, no. 6, June 2022. Pubmed, doi:10.1056/evidoa2100051.
Hariri LP, Flashner BM, Kanarek DJ, O’Donnell WJ, Soskis A, Ziehr DR, Frank A, Nandy S, Berigei SR, Sharma A, Mathisen D, Keyes CM, Lanuti M, Muniappan A, Shepard J-AO, Mino-Kenudson M, Ly A, Hung YP, Castelino FV, Ott HC, Medoff BD, Christiani DC. E-Cigarette Use, Small Airway Fibrosis, and Constrictive Bronchiolitis. NEJM Evid. 2022 Jun;1(6).

Published In

NEJM Evid

DOI

EISSN

2766-5526

Publication Date

June 2022

Volume

1

Issue

6

Location

United States