Vaping health studies

There are at least two dozen new studies on vaping published every week. Many of them are about vaping and health. They range from medical studies on vaping health risks to analysis of e-liquid or constituents in vapor to research on vaping and nicotine addiction. Some are released with a lot of fanfare, and create a huge media stir — often because of alarming claims by the scientists or, more often, by the university press office or outside groups. No vaping research concludes that vaping is “safe”. Anytime you inhale a foreign substance or use a drug like nicotine, there is some risk built into the activity. The scientific consensus is that vaping is, by and large, safer than smoking cigarettes. But beyond agreement that vaping poses fewer risks than smoking, opinions on the possible health and side effects of vaping vary widely.

How does vaping affect heart, lung, and circulatory health?

There is no true long-term vaping research, simply because it hasn’t been around long enough — but also because most vapers were previously smokers, and it is probably impossible to separate the effects caused by years of smoking from signs of potential health problems caused by vaping. That’s what makes this 2017 vape study unique. It tracked health markers for 3.5 years of a group of vapers who had never smoked. The researchers carefully measured markers of heart, lung, and circulatory health, and compared them to a control group of non-vapers who had also never smoked. The findings were uniformly positive. The vapers’ health markers were no worse than the non-smokers’ — even those who vaped the most. “Although it cannot be excluded that some harm may occur at later stages, this study did not demonstrate any health concerns associated with long-term use of [e-cigarettes] in relatively young users who did not also smoke tobacco,” wrote the authors. Health impact of E-cigarettes: a prospective 3.5-year study of regular daily users who have never smoked — Riccardo Polosa, Fabio Cibella, Pasquale Caponnetto, Marilena Maglia, Umberto Prosperini, Cristina Russo, Donald Tashkin

Which flavors matter to adult vapers?

Two papers published in 2017 confirm that adult vapers prefer sweet flavors to the tobacco flavors that most non-vapers assume ex-smokers would like. The first vaping flavor study used data from a 2016 survey of almost 21,000 frequent American vapers to show that fruit and dessert flavors were by far the most popular among all kinds of vapers — even “dual-users” (smokers who also vape). The other paper describes the largest-ever survey of American vapers’ flavor preferences. More than 69,000 adult vapers participated. The survey showed that more than 80 percent of current, former and never smokers who vape preferred fruit or dessert/pastry/bakery flavors. And among the exclusive vapers, just 7.7 percent vape tobacco flavors at all. Changing patterns of first e-cigarette flavor used and current flavors used by 20,836 adult frequent e-cigarette users in the USA — Christopher Russell, Neil McKeganey, Tiffany Dickson, Mitchell Nides Patterns of flavored e-cigarette use among adult vapers in the United States: an internet survey — Konstantinos Farsalinos, Christopher Russell, George Lagoumintzis, Konstantinos Poulas

Can vaping help smokers quit cigarettes?

It’s often claimed that vaping has no effect on users’ smoking status, or even that vaping impedes smoking cessation. However, there were at least three studies in 2017 alone that support vaping as a viable way to reduce or quit cigarette smoking. This study used U.S. Census data to show that vaping helps more smokers try to quit, and that smokers who vape succeed at quitting more often. “Use of e-cigarettes was associated both with a higher quit rate for individuals as well as at the population level; driving an increase in the overall number of people quitting,” said lead author Shu-Hong Zhu. E-cigarette use and associated changes in population smoking cessation: evidence from US current population surveys – Shu-Hong Zhu, Yue-Lin Zhuang, Shiushing Wong, Sharon E Cummins, Gary J Tedeschi

Is there dangerous levels of formaldehyde?

A 2015 research letter to the New England Journal of Medicine caused an uproar when its authors claimed that e-cigarettes emitted dangerous levels of the carcinogen formaldehyde. The study was immediately challenged for using primitive vaping equipment at unreasonably high voltage levels. The formaldehyde study the letter was based on has been debunked, most notably in a 2017 replication study that describes in detail how the original researchers used smoking machines to produce “dry puffs,” which are so unpleasant that no vaper would repeatedly inhale them. “In fact, such testing of e-cigarettes is not very different from overcooking food to the point of becoming an inedible piece of charcoal and then assuming that consumers would consume it and be exposed to the resulting carcinogenic compounds in their daily routine,” wrote lead author Konstantinos Farsalinos. “Accepting that e-cigarettes are less harmful than smoking, such an omission could result in unintendedly misleading smokers into thinking that there is little to be gained by switching to e-cigarettes.” E-cigarettes emit very high formaldehyde levels only in conditions that are aversive to users: A replication study under verified realistic use conditions – Konstantinos E. Farsalinos, Vassilis Voudris, Alketa Spyrou, Konstantinos Poulas

Is vaping a gateway to teenage smoking?

Many e-cigarette skeptics voice the fear that vaping might lead naive adolescent users to cigarettes, undoing decades of progress in reducing smoking uptake among teens. Whether you’re concerned about that or not though, the fact is that it isn’t happening. In fact, since the advent of vaping, teen smoking has fallen rapidly to its lowest level ever. Just 4.2 percent of 12th graders smoked in 2017, according to the CDC. Compare that to 24.6 percent in 1997. A 2017 paper by two tobacco control veterans suggests that not only is vaping not leading to increased teen smoking, it may be serving as a gateway in the opposite direction, leading impressionable potential smokers away from combustible cigarettes. “While research exists to support either side of the argument, we conclude, currently, that youth use of e-cigarettes is unlikely to increase the ranks of future cigarette smokers,” wrote the authors. “Is it possible we could have our cake and eat it too? Perhaps, especially if sensible comprehensive harm reduction policies can earn a place in modern tobacco control efforts.” Adolescents and e-cigarettes: Objects of concern may appear larger than they are – Lynn Kozlowski and Kenneth Warner

Can vaping help reverse COPD in smokers?

Smoking is the largest single cause of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and unfortunately, many smokers with the condition remain unable to quit cigarettes, even after their diagnosis. This three-year study showed that a group of COPD patients who smoked could reverse some of the harm caused by the disease by switching to e-cigarettes. The smokers who switched to vapor products showed improved overall health, and some COPD effects (like respiratory infections) were reduced. “Quitting smoking is a key strategy not only to prevent the onset of COPD but also to stop its progression to more severe disease stages,” said lead author Riccardo Polosa. “Given that many COPD patients continue smoking despite their symptoms, the electronic cigarette could be an effective and safe alternative to the tobacco cigarettes also in this vulnerable population. Health effects in COPD smokers who switch to electronic cigarettes: a retrospective-prospective 3-year follow-up – Riccardo Polosa, Jaymin Bhagwanji Morjaria, Umberto Prosperini, Cristina Russo, Alfio Pennisi, Rosario Puleo, Massimo Caruso, Pasquale Caponnetto

Comprehensive reviews of vape research

There are several comprehensive papers that look at much of the existing science on vaping, and weigh the overall risks and benefits. The three best-known are listed below. The two British reviews come to more optimistic conclusions than the American one, but all three — spoiler! — conclude that vaping poses far less risk than smoking. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine Public Health Consequences of E-Cigarettes (2018) Health England E-cigarettes and heated tobacco products: evidence review (2018) Royal College of Physicians Nicotine without smoke: Tobacco harm reduction (2016) What’s helpful about these is that they’re indexed, so you can find the topic you’re most interested in and either just read the bullet points or really settle in and take a deep dive into the subject matter.

Who funds vaping studies?

The majority of American vaping studies are funded by government dollars — mostly by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) or the FDA Center for Tobacco Products, or a combination of the two. User fees paid by tobacco (not vaping) companies to the FDA fund the vaping health research approved by the NIH and FDA. The grant criteria for joint NIH/FDA funding include asking whether the proposed vaping research will advance the government’s ability to “better regulate” tobacco products (which includes e-cigarettes). Many observers think this predisposes most e-cig research to be focused more on the likely risks of vaping rather than the potential benefits.

Where’s the smoking gun?

If you want to find proof that vaping is either safe or a serious health hazard, it doesn’t exist. There is no “vaping gun” study that settles all of the questions. But hopefully the science presented here has given you some things to consider, and maybe it will further provoke your curiosity and encourage you to do additional research on your own.