Saskatoon StarPhoenix

‘Is he going to need new lungs?’

Teen’s near-fatal vaping-related illness recounted

- SHARON KIRKEY

A 17-year-old Canadian teen who narrowly escaped needing a double lung transplant to save his life is believed to have developed the first suspected case of “popcorn lung” associated with vaping.

Despite its name, there is nothing trivial about it. The case represents a potentiall­y fatal lung injury experts had long suspected vape products were capable of causing, and it comes as the number of teens vaping and the number of vaping-related illnesses are on the rise in both Canada and the United States.

In a report fast-tracked by Canada’s top medical journal, doctors describe how the previously healthy London, Ont. high-school student spent 47 days in hospital, much of it on aggressive life support, including tethered to a machine used to rescue dying people during the SARS outbreak of 2003.

London health officials first revealed the case — now believed the first, or “index case” of vaping-related lung injury in Canada — in September, but only now have details been published.

The boy had vaped daily for five months, alternatin­g between different flavoured cartridges and regularly adding THC to his vaping fluid, when he developed a sudden fever and severe cough.

“He got very sick, very quickly,” said Dr. Karen Bosma, an intensivis­t at London Health Sciences Centre and lead author of the report published Thursday in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal.

The unidentifi­ed youth arrived in the emergency department of his local hospital one week after his symptoms began. He was diagnosed with pneumonia and sent home with a prescripti­on for antibiotic­s.

Five days later, he was back at hospital with worsening “dyspnea” — air hunger. He was struggling to get air into his lungs. X-rays and a CT scan of his chest showed a phenomenon known as the “tree-in-bud” pattern.

The main airways in the lungs branch like a tree. The further you go the more numerous the airways.

His medical team believe he developed bronchioli­tis obliterans, an inflammati­on of the thin-walled, tiny airways called bronchiole­s that go to the furthest parts of the lung.

It’s different from the pattern of injury behind a rash of vaping-related illnesses and deaths in the U.S. known as EVALI, or “e-cigarette, or vaping, product use associated lung injury.”

In those cases, American health officials have named vitamin E acetate (found in THC oil) as a “chemical of concern.”

In the London case, the working suspicion is diacetyl, a chemical best known for the buttery flavour in microwave popcorn and used in many vaping liquids.

The teen developed respirator­y failure — “he couldn’t get enough oxygen into his blood, and he couldn’t get enough carbon dioxide out of his blood,” said Dr. Matthew Stanbrook, a staff respirolog­ist at Toronto Western Hospital and deputy editor of the medical journal.

By the time he was connected to life support, the teen was breathing at a rate of 50 breaths per minute; normal breathing is 12 to 20 breaths per minute.

He was taken to intensive care and put on aggressive resuscitat­ive measures, first a ventilator, “but even the ventilator wasn’t enough to do the work of breathing for him,” said Bosma, an associate scientist at Lawson Health Research Institute. He was connected to ECMO, or extracorpo­real membrane oxygenatio­n, where a pump circulates blood through an artificial lung back into the bloodstrea­m.

Once on ECMO, he stabilized. “But then the question was ... is he going to need new lungs?”

She sat down with his family. “They were aware of how serious this was. They were aware that he could die. And I think it was all rather overwhelmi­ng.

“They were willing, obviously, for their loved one to have every opportunit­y to be given to survive, even if that included needing a lung transplant,” she said.

Twenty-one days after he was admitted to hospital, the teen was transferre­d on ECMO to a transplant centre.

There, doctors began treating him with higher doses of steroids. He slowly improved over the next two weeks. He was weaned from the ECMO and ventilator, his tracheosto­my (a tube in his neck) was removed and he was sent home after 47 days in hospital.

The youth has likely suffered lasting damage to his airways.

With the number of teens in Canada vaping nearly doubling in recent years, it’s hard to know why this teen became so critically sick. Doctors ruled out an infection, the most common cause of inflammati­on in the small airways, leaving them to speculate vaping probably played a role, “given that no other possible cause was identified,” the team reported.

He vaped heavily, and deeply, with a special liking for “dew mountain, “green apple” and “cotton candy” flavours bought via an online Canadian retailer.

It’s possible he had some inherent vulnerabil­ity that made him more susceptibl­e to lung damage, or that the particular products he was using were unusually toxic, Stanbrook said. “We simply don’t know.”

As of Nov. 13, Canada has had eight confirmed or probable cases of severe vaping-related lung disease — three in Quebec, two in New Brunswick and three in B.C.

The U.S. has seen at least 2,172 cases and 42 deaths.

THEY WERE AWARE THAT HE COULD DIE ... I THINK IT WAS ALL RATHER OVERWHELMI­NG.

 ?? CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO­N JOURNAL ?? This chest X-ray of a 17-year-old London, Ont. teen was taken two days after he was admitted to hospital earlier this year with a vaping-related lung injury. It shows opacities, or whitish, dense areas scattered throughout both lungs.
CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO­N JOURNAL This chest X-ray of a 17-year-old London, Ont. teen was taken two days after he was admitted to hospital earlier this year with a vaping-related lung injury. It shows opacities, or whitish, dense areas scattered throughout both lungs.
 ?? LAWSON HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE ?? Dr. Karen Bosma, an intensivis­t at London Health Sciences Centre, is the author of a report on what is believed to be Canada’s first case of “popcorn lung.”
LAWSON HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE Dr. Karen Bosma, an intensivis­t at London Health Sciences Centre, is the author of a report on what is believed to be Canada’s first case of “popcorn lung.”

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