Miami Herald

Florida doctors: Vaping warnings don’t apply here

In light of a CDC study linking vaping to lung disease, Florida marijuana doctors and retailers say medical-marijuana patients are safe from any chemicals or harmful additives in approved products.

- BY SAMANTHA J. GROSS sgross@miamiheral­d.com

U.S. public-health officials had a strong warning for those who use vaporizers and e-cigarettes Friday afternoon: You should probably stop vaping.

The suggestion came shortly after a third vapingrela­ted death due to sudden, serious lung disease was reported in Indiana. That followed a death in Illinois and another in Oregon, where a man who bought a marijuana vaporizer from a legal dispensary died of lung disease. A possible fourth U.S. death is being investigat­ed.

The disease striking people who vape has been tied, in many cases, to products that contain THC, the main active ingredient in marijuana, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

In Florida, however, docand medical-marijuana treatment centers say there is little cause for concern in the state, where about 357,000 patients are approved to use the drug as medicine. Many of them use vaporizers to inhale oils or whole-flower marijuana.

“In the regulated markets, we tend to be as safe as we can,” said Barry Gordon, a Venice-based licensed marijuana doctor and adviser to Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried. He treats the third-largest group of marijuana patients in Florida. “We feel like it is an appropriat­e means of delivering rapid and reliable means of relief.”

Courtney Coppola, director of the state’s medical marijuana program, said she is still reviewing the report but urges patients to be wary and report any negators tive reactions to vaping their medication.

“As these investigat­ions continue to develop it is important that patients consult with their qualified marijuana ordering physician on the safest route of medical treatment, and immediatel­y seek medical assistance if they experience respirator­y distress,” she

wrote in an email.

A major case study published Friday in the New England Journal of Medicine found that more than 25 states have reported vaping-related lung disease, 215 vaping-related lung disease cases were confirmed, and 235 possible cases were being investigat­ed. Symptoms include cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, nausea, and fatigue, the CDC said.

While some patients said their symptoms developed over a few days, others said symptoms arose after several weeks.

E-cigarette (and vaporizer) liquids and aerosols contain chemicals such as propylene glycol, glycerin, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns, nitrosamin­es, and even inorganic chemicals such as toxic metals. The chemicals are often used in black-market products as cutting agents and can be destructiv­e to the lung cavity. The heating coils that act as a combusting agent might also release metals such as manganese and zinc into the aerosol, which can be toxic when inhaled.

Although the exact cause or causes of the reported illnesses remain under investigat­ion, products containing THC — the naturally occurring marijuana component that produces a high — are the most commonly reported e-cigarette product among the case patients (84%).

On the CDC’s website, it advises young adults and pregnant women to stop using e-cigarettes and recommends that smokers attempting to quit use counseling and FDA-approved medication­s instead.

The average patient suffering from vape-related lung disease is 19 years old and healthy, and most of the patients had no relevant medical history or chronic lung disease, according to the report. All but three patients were hospitaliz­ed for the illness, and about a third of them had to use a ventilator or a breathing tube.

“We are committed to finding out what is making people sick,” said CDC Director Robert Redfield. “All available informatio­n is being carefully analyzed, and these initial findings are helping us narrow the focus of our investigat­ion and get us closer to the answers needed to save lives.”

Patients in Florida say they trust the products they use, largely because of rulemaking and inspection procedures put in place by the state. It’s the blackmarke­t vapes that people should worry about, they say.

Jason Perlow, a 50-yearold computer-security technician from Coral Springs, became a medical-marijuana patient in June 2017 and uses a vaporizer daily to treat his anxiety.

He says he mostly relies on products from VidaCann, which he says uses natural terpenes to replicate the effect of a cannabis plant. Perlow also uses GrowHealth­y and Liberty Health Sciences Products, which he describes as similarly reliable.

Perlow vapes only a couple of times a day, unlike former smokers who might vape throughout the day to kick their cigarette addiction.

There, he says, lies the difference.

“People who use it for anxiety and depression … they’re not vaping constantly,” Perlow said. “The amount of ingestion is lower.”

Paul Tuttle, a 42-year-old hot-tub mechanic from Sarasota, is a bit more skeptical. He uses vape cartridges from AltMed to help with back pain, sleeplessn­ess, and anxiety, but he refuses to buy from companies like Trulieve, which sell cartridges that contain additives.

Tuttle says “you can absolutely have cartridges without them.”

“Cannabis doctors should have been warning patients of this,” he said.

Trulieve, Florida’s largest licensed medical-marijuana retailer, says because initial reports indicate the products in question lack the quality control that the state requires, regulated vendors should be considered safe, including itself.

“All Trulieve branded products are subject to industry-leading quality control measures, including independen­t laboratory testing,” Trulieve spokeswoma­n Victoria Walker wrote in an email. “We will continue to monitor the situation and want to assure our customers that we take all necessary steps to deliver top quality products.”

Multi-state marijuana giant Surterra said it will “relentless­ly” continue to follow safety standards set by the states in which it operates, and that Florida patients can trust “legitimate companies” like it. Spokeswoma­n Laurie MacKenzie noted in an email that since Florida marijuana companies are “vertically integrated,” or handle the process seed-tosale without any third parties, patients can trust that the process is clean of dangerous chemicals.

“The news of people becoming ill by e-cigarettes underscore­s the importance of a legal and licensed cannabis market,” Surterra spokeswoma­n Laurie MacKenzie wrote in an email. “Cannabis vaping products, which are sold in licensed dispensari­es, pass rigorous testing procedures.”

Florida marijuana companies Curaleaf, Liberty

Health Sciences, Fluent, VidaCann, GrowHealth­y, and AltMed did not respond to requests for comments Friday.

 ?? JENNIFER KING jking@miamiheral­d.com, file 2019 ?? A study said 215 vaping-related lung disease cases were confirmed. Symptoms include cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, nausea, and fatigue, the CDC said.
JENNIFER KING jking@miamiheral­d.com, file 2019 A study said 215 vaping-related lung disease cases were confirmed. Symptoms include cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, nausea, and fatigue, the CDC said.
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