Adolescents and young adults who use e-cigarettes reported vaping cannabis, according to selected data from the national Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) study.
Ruoyan Sun, PhD, an assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and colleagues examined results of PATH’s wave5 survey conducted from December 2018 to November 2019. PATH is a National Institutes of Health–Food and Drug Administration collaboration begun in 2013.
Their analysis, published online Feb. 7, 2022, in JAMA Pediatrics, evaluated the frequency of cannabis vaping across several age groups: 164 respondents ages 12-14; 919 participants ages 15-17; and 3,038 participants ages 18-24. Respondents included for analysis reported electronic nicotine product consumption in the past 30 days. In response to the question “When you have used an electronic product, how often were you using it to smoke marijuana, marijuana concentrates, marijuana waxes, THC, or hash oils?” 35.0% (95% confidence interval, 29.3%-41.2%) of current e-smokers aged 12-14 years said they had done so, as did 51.3% (95% CI, 47.7%-54.9%) of those aged 15-17 years and 54.6% (95% CI, 52.5%-56.7%) of young adults aged 18-24.
The prevalence of those who reported vaping cannabis every time they vaped was 3.1% (95% CI, 1.3%-6.9%) of youths aged 12-14 years, 6.7% (95% CI, 5.3%-8.6%) of youths aged 15-17 years, and 10.3% (95% CI, 9.0%-11.6%) of young adults aged 18-24.
Among children ages 12-14, 65% said they never vaped cannabis, while 48.7% and 45.4%, respectively, in the two older groups said they did.
“This is a very important finding and it mirrors what some of us have already seen in practice,” said pediatric pulmonologist S. Christy Sadreameli, MD, MHS, an assistant professor of pediatrics at John Hopkins University, Baltimore. “It is important for pediatricians to realize that dual use of cannabis and nicotine vaping, and exclusive use of cannabis vaping, are not uncommon. It informs how we ask questions and how we counsel our patients.” Dr. Sadreameli was not involved in the PATH study.
Overall, the survey participants were 56% male, with 24% of respondents identifying as Hispanic, 8% as non-Hispanic Black, 58% as non-Hispanic White, and 10% as of other race/ethnicity. The weighted proportion of current e-cigarette use was 3.0% (95% CI, 2.6%-3.4%) in youths ages 12-14 years, 14.4% (95% CI, 13.5%-15.3%) in those 15-17 years, and 26.2% (95% CI, 25.3%-27.1%) in young adults.
Other recent national surveys such as the National Institute on Drug Abuses’s Monitoring the Future are reporting a growing prevalence of youth cannabis vaping, Dr. Sun said. For example, the prevalence of cannabis vaping in the past 12-month period among grade 12 students grew from 9.5% in 2017 to 22.1% in 2020. Vaping cannabis was more prevalent among Hispanic teens than other ethnicities.
Vaping devices such as e-cigarettes, vaping pens, e-cigars, and e-hookahs can be used to inhale multiple substances, including nicotine, cannabis, and opium, Dr. Sun noted in an interview. “So in addition to asking about the behavior of vaping itself, pediatricians could pay more attention to what is being vaped in these devices.”
According to Dr. Sadreameli, vaping more than one substance at a time could potentially work synergistically to cause more harm, compared with one product alone. “The other aspect to consider is that vaping multiple types of products may increase the chance of harm from other components of the mixture,” she said. For instance, a lot of the e-cigarette or vaping use-associated lung injury (EVALI) cases have been linked to vitamin E acetate, which was found in certain cannabis formulations. “Anecdotally, most EVALI patients I’ve met seemed to report use of multiple products, including cannabis-containing and nicotine-containing products.”
Dr. Sadreameli added that some cannabis vapers will have other issues. “For example, there is a severe vomiting syndrome I’ve seen, which is induced by cannabis and improved by cessation from cannabis,” she said. “It is important for pediatricians to ask the right questions of their patients in order to better understand what they may be experiencing, provide counseling, and to help them.”
A related issue is cessation, she said. “For those working to achieve cessation from nicotine-based products, sometimes nicotine replacement therapies are helpful. However, cessation from cannabis-containing products is going to look different.”
Although the study did not yield information on the prevalence simultaneous nicotine/cannabis vaping, the authors suggested that some vapers may be combining substances. Previous studies may have modestly overestimated the prevalence of nicotine vaping given their finding that some current e-cigarette users reported vaping cannabis every time they vaped and may be vaping cannabis exclusively. “However, if some current users vaped nicotine and cannabis simultaneously, then overestimation of nicotine vaping would be smaller,” they wrote.
Future surveys on this area should contain detailed questions on nicotine and cannabis vaping, including the substance being vaped and the frequency and intensity of use, Dr. Sun said. “In addition, these surveys could examine some other substances that are being vaped, such as opium and cocaine.”
The PATH study is supported by the NIH, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Department of Health & Human Services, and the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products. The authors and Dr. Sadreameli had no competing interests to disclose.