Speaker  1: Welcome  to the ASHPOfficial Podcast. Your  guide to issues related to medication use, public health and the profession of  pharmacy.
Norman:
Thank  you for joining us for Therapeutics  Thursday podcast. This podcast provides an opportunity to listen in as  members to sit down and discuss what's new and ongoing in the world of  therapeutics.
Norman:
My  name is Norman Fenn, Vice Chair  [inaudible 00:00:26] of the pediatric section  advisory group of the section of clinical specialists and scientists and I will  be your host today [inaudible 00:00:31] ASHP Therapeutic Thursdays podcast.  With me today are Tom Kraus, vice president of government affairs with ASHP,  Kim Novak clinical pharmacy specialist and PGY2 Residency Program Director at  Nationwide Children's Hospital and Kyle Mays, pediatric critical care  pharmacist and PGY1 pharmacy residency program director at Cardinal Glennon  Children's Hospital.
Norman:
Tom,  Kim and Kyle, thank you so much for joining us today. Let's get started talking  about today's topic, which is the vaping epidemic. Tom, maybe start first.  Could you tell us a little bit about the way agencies are currently approaching  the vaping epidemic?
Tom  Kraus:
Thanks  Norman. I think we should think about how agencies regulate vaping in the  context of broader tobacco regulation. So you've seen at the state level,  several States implement state-free environments like in bars and restaurants.  25 States have already taken action there and over 50% of the US population is  covered by those types of regulations.
Tom  Kraus:
Several  States have expanded cigarette taxes to include e-cigarettes. Several States  moved over the past couple of years to expand the smoking age to 21. And then  the federal government actually passed legislation at the end of 2019 to extend  that across all States. And then FDA for its part has been working for the past  decade to implement a program, to regulate tobacco products.
Tom  Kraus:
And  a couple of years ago, they acted to incorporate e-cigarettes and nicotine  delivery devices into that broader context of tobacco regulation. So in that  broader effort, they're working on things like graphic warning labels for all  tobacco products, they're working on things like potentially a nicotine product  standard, which could reduce the amount of nicotine and combustible cigarettes  down to a level that is not addictive.
Tom  Kraus:
So  those things are all really exciting. We'll have to see how they play out. Many  of them are in early stages, but I think it's really a positive indication that  the agency is actively and publicly working on those things. Now, when it comes  to e-cigarettes and vaping, the most recent thing that the agency FDA has done  has been to focus on flavored products.
Tom  Kraus:
And  so the agency tease and president Trump actually sort of indicated that the  agency was considering banning all flavored products from e-cigarettes. And  then recently what came out was actually a partial ban. So what they did was  they banned some of the e-cigarettes that include pre-filled pods with flavored  nicotine, but they let other products like open containers in which the user  mixes nicotine and a flavoring product, they let those remain on the market,  and the logic was that those products are more likely to be used by adults,  whereas the smaller cartridge products are more likely to be used by youths who  have not previously been users of combustible cigarettes.
Tom  Kraus:
So  we'll have to see how that plays out. I think there's a lot of concern in the  public health community that that approach is too lenient and will allow  avenues for young folks who are not using these products as an alternative to  combustible tobacco, but are rather initiating tobacco use via e-cigarettes.
Tom Kraus: Then  FDA is also working with DEA. So together those two agencies have taken some  action against websites that are selling vaping devices used for specifically  for not nicotine, but for THC containing products. So I think we're seeing some  regulation across these products. I think we have to acknowledge the FDA has  been quite slow to really get its regulatory regime up and running for  e-cigarettes.
Tom  Kraus:
And  even now as it implements some of these stronger requirements in response to  the surge in youth vaping, even that is a sort of partial measure where they're  banning some products that are perceived to be focused on the youth market row,  leaving a lot of products that are oriented to adults on the market.
Norman:
Wow.  That's really interesting. Thank you so much for that summary, Tom. I think the  other thing that members would like to learn about is how is the ASHP dealing  with this very particular issue?
Tom  Kraus:
Yeah,  that's a great question. So ASHP has long standing policy, discouraging tobacco  use and advocating for tobacco free environments, discouraging the use,  distribution and sale of tobacco products. And recently the House of Delegates  approved adding nicotine delivery devices or e-cigarettes to that policy. So  that is something that we have now incorporated into our general tobacco  control related policy.
Tom  Kraus:
And  so this is a topic that while it is not necessarily one of the most active  areas for ASHP, it is one where, to the extent that there are opportunities to  engage with federal policymakers around nicotine delivery devices, we certainly  do that. And we at various times when the agency has looked like it's going to  take a positive step, we've tried to get out there in public through messaging  to the agency and on social media voicing our support for a proactive stance  from FDA to regulate these products.
Norman:
Fantastic.  Thank you. Let's switch gears a little bit here and talk about the epidemiology  of vaping and lung injury. Kyle, can you tell us a little bit about how this  has evolved across the United States?
Kyle:
Yes.  So roughly about March of 2019, we started seeing the first reports of patients  coming into the hospital with lung injury associated with e-cigarette use or  vaping. It really kind of slowly started over the couple of months after March  kind of inclining until it reached about a peak in mid September.
Kyle:
And  now it's been on a slow decline since September, right now, it seems like  reports have really drifted off due to a couple of different reasons. And that  nobody's really quite sure, it could be that there was a heightened awareness  by the public with all of the news going on in the media. And it could also be  just a change in way that the persons that were manufacturing the different  cartridges, they might've felt there was a link with vitamin E, so they might  have removed that from the cartridges, but it's still too early to really state  one way or the other what the reason for the decline is.
Kyle:
Kind  of going by the numbers as of January 14th, it looks like we have roughly 2,600  patients that have been hospitalized. Kind of looking at the breakdown of those  patient groups, it looks like the vast majority were male, about 65%. And the  median age was 24 years of age with the most popular age range of 13 to that 35  year category.
Kyle:
Luckily,  there has been only a few deaths. By few, I mean about 60. Most of them were  older populations. So again, the median age was about 51 years of age with a  range of 15 to 75. Again, a lot of those deaths are still currently under  investigation. So some of those numbers might change as we continue to learn  more about what the actual link to these injuries were. As far as the type of  vaping products that were being used, there's quite a number.
Kyle:
So  it kind of is easy to break it down in the generation. So first-generation was  the disposable e-cigarettes. Those are just prefilled cartridges that you can  utilize a couple of times, and then you dispose of it once you're done.
Kyle:
The  second generation is e-cigarettes with a prefilled or refillable cartridge. So  you can take those in and out of a vaping device and use it as needed. And  again, it's more of a longterm product, so you can keep the actual vaping  device and then just plug in the new cartridges as you see fit.
Kyle:
These  cartridges are the ones that have been associated most with cartridges with THC  and the vitamin E. So these are the ones that have been linked the most to  causing the vaping related injury.
Kyle:
The  third generation is the tanks or the mods. So this is where you will see a  larger device. You can fill it with either nicotine products, you can fill it  with THC products. These are the ones that also tend to produce the bigger  hits, have the different flavors that tend to be popular with persons that are  using it for nicotine.
Kyle:
And  then lastly is the newest generation or the fourth generation, which is the pod  mods or the pre-filter refillable. This generation tends to be the most popular  with adolescents, mainly because of their ease of use as well as the way that  they look. So they look like common devices that you would expect that  adolescents to carry around.
Kyle:
So  USB sticks, it can also look like inhalers of commonly used medications for  asthma. They also look like cases for lipsticks, so they're easily concealable,  so that's why they tend to be a lot more popular with the adolescent group  because they're able to hide them for lack of better words.
Kyle:
So  these tend to be the ones that most of the adolescents are using. And as a  result, these fourth generation pods, they also are ... they use nicotine salts  versus freebased nicotine, which is commonly found in actual cigarettes.  Because of this with the nicotine salts it's allows for a higher hit when the  persons are taking a hit.
Kyle:
And  so it allows for a higher delivery of nicotine, which is more preferable to the  adolescent than using the other forms of nicotine supplements.
Kyle:
Lastly,  you run into vaporizers. These are mainly used to heat up THC products or  actual marijuana plants. So those ones tend not to be so much used in the  public, obviously because they're not transportable easily enough, but these  are also things that can be used at home, particularly to deliver, usually THC  laced products.
Norman:
All  right. Thank you for that. Tom, maybe you could chime in here. What kind of  distinguishes these products from those that are FDA approved?
Tom  Kraus:
Yeah,  the FDA does not approve any products intended for use with THC, right? They  have their whole regulatory system is built around tobacco products and  incorporating those nicotine delivery devices that are associated  tobacco-derived delivery of nicotine.
Tom  Kraus:
That's  really what they're focusing on. As I mentioned, there is some variation in how  they're regulating some of those products. So the ones that ... products that  include pre-filled pods, they've taken some action to discourage or ban the use  of flavorings in those products primarily to get at this concern about youth  initiation of tobacco use, while they've left space in the market for use of  the devices that are filled by the user with a combination of nicotine and  flavorings that tend to be more associated with adult use.
Tom  Kraus:
And  this is like a long standing struggle that the agency has had. How do you allow  some space in the market for adult users, particularly those who might be  switching from combustible tobacco use to vaping, which might be associated  with some level of harm reduction while still discouraging use among youth who  have never previously used any tobacco product.
Tom  Kraus:
And  so you want to make sure that there's not a product that is appealing to youth  such that they're going to initiate tobacco use when they never would have  otherwise. So as far as what the FDA is focused on, it is the nicotine delivery  products. As I mentioned, there is some variation in how they approach  different versions of the devices based on preference of youth for those  devices.
Tom  Kraus:
And  with regard to the THC oriented devices, that's really not a space that the FDA  regulates proactively, though they have worked with DEA to take enforcement  actions against some companies that are marketing products, specifically  marketed as THC delivery devices.
Norman:
Kim,  I also understand that both you and Kyle have treated patients that have had  injuries secondary to vaping. I was wondering if perhaps you and Kyle could  potentially briefly share your experiences with treating these patients and  Kim, if you wouldn't mind, just kind of talking with us first about that.
Kim:
Sure.  I think one of the things that really sticks out to me about these patients  who've had vaping related injuries is that they've had a really variable  presentation. We've had patients, particularly those who have a history of  asthma, perhaps they were well-controlled when they have their first severe  asthma exacerbation that requires admission in perhaps several years.
Kim:
So  some have come in that way. These patients typically have taken a lot longer to  kind of resolve their acute asthma symptoms, their length of stay tends a  little bit longer. Albuterol usage is more frequent and takes a lot more time  to wean down to a acceptable home going regimen.
Kim:
And  many times they've required a prolonged steroid course to kind of get over  their acute symptoms. I'm sure we've probably overlooked many of these types of  patients as well, just to lack of disclosure perhaps by the patients or even  earlier on in this epidemic, lack of awareness of us to necessarily even ask  the questions about the product usage.
Kim:
On  other hand, we've also had patients present very severely kind of in the  context of a acute onset community acquired pneumonia that readily progresses  and may even require admission to the pediatric intensive care unit, perhaps  use of noninvasive mechanical ventilation techniques like bypass or even  require intubation and be placed on a ventilator.
Kim:
These  patients, again, may have some portion of being overlooked as well due to maybe  a lack of ability to get history in some of the more critically ill patients.  But one of the things that is pretty universal is they tend not to respond to  the traditional community acquired pneumonia treatment pathways, your standard,  third generation cephalosporin, or high dose ampicillin, according to our  treatment guidelines.
Kim:
And  that's where oftentimes pulmonology gets consulted more for being able to do a  bronchoscopy, do some sampling techniques. Maybe they think history came out  and discussion with maybe the patient or their family or caregivers. And that's  where they're able to do some of the more advanced sampling techniques, that's  where they do a visualization of the airway, people do special cultures and so  forth.
Kim:
And  these patients, again, even though they've similarly presented severely have had  some variable findings as well. Everything from looking more like an allergic  type of pneumonia with high eosinophil predominance to presenting more like a  lipoid pneumonia with a lot of lipid-laden macrophages and so forth.
Kim:
Oftentimes,  these patients do get better with steroids and, maybe targeting early growth of  any bacteria that might grow on their cultures and so forth. But some of these  patients, even after they've already turned a corner, some of these cultures do  result later and we've had a few cases. We've had fungal organisms identified  on bronchoscopy culture days to even a few weeks after the initial  presentation.
Kim:
So  really a very broad range of presentation. We haven't had any patients present  to the point of needing advanced life support, like things like ECMO and so  forth, but I know there have been some adolescents out around the country that  have presented that way, when there have been phone consultations for  consideration for lung transplant and those sorts of things. But I believe  luckily those patients did turn a corner, did not require pursuit of those  sorts of interventions to help save them.
Norman:
Kyle,  do you happen to have similar cases or perhaps any other different experiences  associated with these kinds of patients?
Kyle:
Yeah.  Similar to Kim, it seems to be a diagnosis of exclusion where we're having a  really hard time trying to pinpoint those patients that come into us with  vaping related injuries. What we're finding out though, at least from my  experience in the ICU is that they tend to come in with what appears to be  acute respiratory distress syndrome, and so we start that pathway really  because we don't have any other explanation for what's going on.
Kyle:
We  don't have a history of previous asthma, we don't have a history of reactive  airway disease, no recent sick contacts, virus panel is negative and we start  twiddling our thumbs more or less because we're trying to figure out what's  going on. And at that point, when they come to my unit, at least it's already  kind of on the downhill portion where we're having to implement mechanical  ventilation.
Kyle:
For  example, the floors have already tried the noninvasive methods. So I usually  see the patients when they are kind of at their worst. Typically, what we do is  kind of like Kim said, we tend to get pulmonology involved. We go down that  pathway, we do a rigorous history with either the patient, if possible, or the  patient's caregivers, just to see if there's anything that we're missing.
Kyle:
And  a couple of times that's worked to our benefit, where we did find out that  there was a history of vaping. Several times, we've done a urine drug screening  and we've identified THC in the urine. And so we've had to pursue that pathway  just to make sure it wasn't an edible version of THC versus an inhaled version.
Kyle:
But  unfortunately, depending on what patient you're dealing with, there might be no  communication between the parents and the patient, so that leads to a harder  time for us trying to pinpoint what's exactly going on.
Kyle:
I  mean a lot of times the parents tend to be in the dark, so they are not able to  really give us a full history, unfortunately, and the only way we find out is  after the lung injury has improved and we're on the upswing and at that point,  the patient's doing better. But then at that point we're able to ask them, were  you having a history of vaping or, what's the deal?
Kyle:
Sometimes  we find out that they did vape. Again, we're making a leap that it was vaping  and maybe not something else, but that's really the only thing we have to go  off of at that point. Somebody can really just kind of guessing at who these  patients are right now, because it's really hard to identify them.
Norman:
And  it is interesting to note that really the population we hear most about with  vaping injuries are adolescents, any idea what the literature says about  adolescent physiology that could potentially put them at higher risk for  injury? Are there any good data out there?
Kim:
Yeah,  so it's really interesting when you're dealing with this unpredictable evolving  epidemic is that we're really creating the literature as we're living it. So  there really isn't a lot out there specifically with vaping and why adolescents  or young adults may be at higher risk. But going back to kind of lung  physiology can really kind of help us understand why some of these patients may  be at higher risk.
Kim:
We  certainly have heard those testimonials from older smokers who have  transitioned away from traditional tobacco products as a way to cut down on  their exposure and are very adamant that these products are beneficial to them  and certainly have testimonies that they are safe for use.
Kim:
However,  an adult smoker or former smoker is different than a young adolescent or a  young adult who is taking up these vape products for the first time. When you  think of an older smoker, they've had presumably years or even decades of  exposure to hydrocarbons. We've all seen those pictures in the media over the  years, as the explanted lungs that are full of smoke and dirt and debris, and  they almost look black.
Kim:
Basically  that is providing a barrier, honestly, between the airway and the actual  physiologic tissue of the lung that may be preventing certain topical exposure  to the lung from any sort of inhaled agents.
Kim:
But  just as [inaudible 00:20:49] some of the older smokers may have already started  to develop chronic obstructive lung disease or COPD. And again, they're going  to have more airway secretions that may also provide some sort of protective  barrier, if there are certain components within these products that could be  causing these lung events. And so adolescents with their nice, healthy, clean  lungs may be at higher risk for exposure to these vape products.
Kim:
As  mentioned earlier, we also have to think about how adolescents are using these  products. They tend to seek out the products that deliver that higher hit, that  higher exposure. They may even be modifying their delivery devices so that they  are achieving higher temperatures than they were actually designed to achieve  and, or delivering larger hits than they were designed to achieve.
Kim:
When  we look at our products, that's the extra co-factor that we still don't  completely know about, all these vape products since nicotine is not a  pleasurable taste, they are combined with a lot of chemicals and organic acids  to mask the taste, will make them more enjoyable by the vapor.
Kim:
However,  they tend to solubilize at higher temperatures. So again, the heat may be  altering these chemical compounds. They may be solubilizing oils that are using  additives, particularly for the street obtained products and the THC and CBD  type products have had the vitamin E concern and so forth.
Kim:
And  then additionally, we have to think about, do these products have some  additional contaminants that they might be exposing our patients to? One of my APPE  students this year actually did a journal club that looked at some contaminants  within some commercially available products that was done out of Harvard, it  was published back March of last year, but they had basically procured a  variety of commercially available products online and based on previous year  sales and everything, as well as they went down to a quarter store near campus  and purchased some things there as well.
Kim:
And  they did send out lab testing for a couple of components, one endotoxin, which  is a component found in gram-negative cell walls and has been linked to a lot  of occupational lung diseases, particularly those people who might work in the  agricultural industry and cotton textiles and so forth that has been linked  with airway disease, asthma-like presentations, emphysema, and chronic  inflammation. And they actually found about 25% of the samples did have  significant endotoxin contaminants.
Kim:
And  they had also looked at beta-1 D-glucan, which is a component oftentimes in  fungal cell walls as well as also a certain bacteria in LJ and so forth. And  over 80% of their samples had significant beta-1 D-glucan contamination as  well.
Kim:
So  we're probably dealing with a couple of things. Yes, we have nice clean lungs,  but we also have products that may have some contamination that may pose a risk  for patients who don't have some extra defense against introduction to those  altered chemicals or excipients that have been included in some of these  products.
Norman:
Well,  as pediatric patients, you've both, no doubt worked with your institutions to  provide both education and tips for parents and patients combating the epidemic  [inaudible 00:23:53]. Would you mind sharing with us what each of your  institutions have done perhaps starting with you, Kyle?
Kyle:
Yeah,  so we have the luxury of having the Missouri Poison Center attached to our  facility. So we actually do a lot of collaboration with that group. So they  reach out to the community a lot through going to the schools and doing talks  with either the pharmacist or the nurses that are at the poison center. We've  also had the opportunity of using my own APPE students or my residents that do  those teachings as well.
Kyle:
The  other thing that we get to do is we promote the information that the CDC has  been putting out. They have a lot of good information for healthcare providers,  patients as well as patient caregivers or parent that kind of go over the risk  and mitigation strategies with vaping. So we have been utilizing that when we  do education for patients that tell us that they are actively using nicotine or  THC.
Kyle:
So  again, we'll give them the handouts, kind of go over them, be a resource for  them whenever they are ready to talk to us as not everybody is willing to talk  to us right away, they might need some time to think about, if they want to  stop, and so we just always make those resources readily available for them,  and then whenever they would like to talk to us, they can always put in a  consult to us.
Kyle:
And  then our hospitals in general, just have always been actively promoting within  the community and talking to local media outlets, just raising awareness and  concerns about the new vaping epidemic, I guess. That's pretty much everything  that we've been doing. Again, a lot of local work with our Missouri Poison  Center and they've been great for helping us spread the word.
Kim:
Yeah.  I would say very similar experience to Kyle here at Nationwide Children's as  well. We also have our Local Central Ohio Poison Control Center who has been a  wonderful partner in getting information out into the community. Our hospital  also has a pretty active social media and online platforms, there's references  and statements and everything they're available for parents and the community  to resource links, to a lot of the CDC information and so forth.
Kim:
And  definitely, I think some other things we've done within our institution, we  have kind of electronic storyboards, which are basically computerized rolling  PowerPoint presentations and everything that are located in several key public  areas within the hospital, and definitely including some vaping information and  some encouragement for parents to talk to their kids about vaping and ask the  questions and everything. So that's a way that we've been able to keep that in  the mind of parents as they come through.
Kim:
And  also we've integrated several questionnaires within our intake surveys and  everything for admitted patients and clinic patients who try to seek out  information from patients as they come in related to a vaping history. Many of  us if not that, as parents hear these questions, it's definitely more on their  mind and their awareness that we do consider this to be a public health issue  and something we are very concerned about and customize certain care for their  children.
Norman:
So  you kind of touched on this point, but really how are you having these  conversations with the patients and with their parents? What kind of strategies  have you utilized in your encounters with adolescents to determine if they have  had the vaping related injuries or really, how can you counsel them on this?  What have you done thus far?
Kim:
That's  a great question. And I don't know that there's a great single answer that  works for every single situation. I think definitely having it on the intake H  & Ps and the new encounter kind of collection of data information when  patients present anywhere within the healthcare system, at least can start that  conversation and start that data collection.
Kim:
But  I really do think it requires a whole team of people to perhaps get that  information out of a patient or family. Because as we all know, adolescents,  they're tricky to work with many times. They don't always want to share  information or they have fear of reprisal if they were to share or disclose  certain information in front of their parent or caregiver. So really trying to  have that conversation, particularly in those cases where you suspect there  might be some use or at least you want to rule out there might be some use  contributing to their presentation.
Kim:
And  so having that one on one conversation without a parent there is often helpful.  That could be oftentimes the medical residents, sometimes it's medical  students, pharmacists, a pharmacy student, anybody who is having that  conversation even during a med rec process, for example, can really perhaps  form a relationship with that patient and get them to be comfortable in sharing  that information.
Kim:
I  definitely think when we are talking to these patients, I think keeping it as  nonjudgmental as possible is very important. Many times patients will disclose  information to pharmacists, they won't necessarily disclose to their physicians  because they feel like we're more on their side particularly, or we don't have  the ability to punish them for example, for their life choices.
Kim:
So I  think sometimes we have an opportunity to find out information that maybe some  other healthcare providers may not. One of my personal techniques is kind of to  share my own experiences. We all went through our adolescent years. We all went  through college. We've all probably made some poor life choices along the way.
Kim:
And  I think sharing that this is the heart of growing up and we are concerned about  their health and sometimes these choices do have repercussions and consequences  and we're just trying to do our best to make sure that they're getting the best  care, but also giving them some confidence that we've all gone through  adolescence and peer pressure and everything along with them. And that we're  really on their side and we're growing up together and we're here to support  them the best we can. And that they'll honestly will help us do that to the  best that we can as well.
Kyle:
Yeah.  I mean, what Kim said was a 10 out of 10 answer, not really whole lot I can add  to it outside of just reemphasizing building that trust and that relationship  with a patient, I think really helps you maybe get some answers that maybe  they're unwilling to share with like Kim said, their parents for fear of  repercussion of what might come from that discussion.
Kyle:
So  it's not just pharmacists, but again, the entire medical team has the  responsibility to develop that relationship with their patients and then create  kind of a safe environment so that they're able to share that information with  us, so that we can provide the education, so that they don't have longterm  consequence.
Kyle:
We've  all gone through a similar phase and we've had to overcome these types of peer  pressure, overcome adversity if you're not joining in with what is the current  trend of the adolescent world. So I don't really have a whole lot to add to  what Kim said, except just to reemphasize some of those points.
Norman:
Well,  since the appearance of these vaping devices seem to be changing and parents  are sometimes at a loss on how their kids are actually obtaining them,  especially with the changes in the rules and regulations federally, what advice  or resources do you recommend for parents who are concerned about this?
Kim:
Yeah,  I definitely think parents need to educate themselves particularly about what  products look like. As Kyle had mentioned earlier, the CDC has a wonderful  platform of lab information for both healthcare providers, as well as patients  in particular, they have a document that they routinely update and it's  basically e-cigarette and vaping product visual dictionary.
Kim:
So  it will actually have pictures of products and what they look like and  comparing a vape device it's meant to look like a USB thumb drive compared to  what a real USB thumb drive looks I mean just referring parents to those sorts  of resources, so they can be on the lookout for those things that they might  overlook within their home environment should they encounter them and so forth  can be very helpful for them.
Kim:
But  definitely, keeping up with social media, talking with other parents within PTA  organization and support groups. I'm a member of my local communities little  Facebook chat group and things like that. And definitely keeping parents  engaged that way with each other, they can learn within their community what  sorts of trends are going on within your school districts and so forth. It  could be extremely helpful in helping them decide risk factors for their family  and how they're going to monitor for those things.
Kyle:
Yeah,  the CDC's website has that great visual dictionary, which should at least give  the parents as well as the healthcare providers a visual aid to see like what  they should be looking for, how they can educate the parents when they come in,  what devices they should be on the lookout for. And then to, again,  re-emphasize some of the points of building communication within our own parent  population.
Kyle:
Recently,  I have a pharmacist that I work with that has three teenage boys. So she's kind  of my go-to for the current and trendy devices as they are rapidly changing. So  I just learned about new ones today. And so I put that away in my own little  library of the new terms for vaping, just because they won't always say that  they're vaping, they might say that they're juuling or that they're enjoying is  the current lingo that I've been hearing.
Kyle:
So  trying to stay hip for a lack of better words, will at least keep the parents  up to date on what they should be watching for. And then again, even having an  honest conversation with your child might lead you to understand what actually  is going on out there.
Kyle:
Again,  not all children are going to be using this, but maybe one of the children  within the family is using it. So having another child might be able to key you  in on some of the lingo, just to kind of be aware of what's going on in your  child's life.
Norman:
Fantastic.  Just coming towards the end. What are some key takeaways that you would want  listeners to remember from this particular podcast?
Kim:
I  guess I'll go first. I think the key takeaways are that, this is an evolving  situation and we continue to learn new information. We're in a situation where  we have a drug, i.e the vape product that has not been as regulated as it  probably should have been over the years. And added onto that, we have a  relatively new device, if you want to think about it as a nicotine nebulizer,  that somehow escaped the rigorous scrutiny that other drug devices have  undergone for our FDA approved drugs and so forth.
Kim:
And  so as pharmacists it's really important for us to realize that, that's really  what we're dealing with. We're having a drug being delivered through a variety  of devices that may or may not be manipulated by the end user. And so we have questionable  content in that device and questionable appropriateness of drug delivery from  that device.
Kim:
And  just going back to the things we should always be thinking about, if we're  going to nebulize a product, it should be sterile, it should be in appropriate  pH, it should be in appropriate osmolarity, it should be in appropriate  particle size. And right now we don't know if what's being vaped actually meets  what we would consider to be safe inhalation administration.
Kim:
And  so as more and more of these cases come out and get investigated, hopefully  we're able to be able to delineate some of those issues we've had with products  exactly what they are and combine that with all these different pieces across  the country, to be able to make some changes in either regulation or product  control or product design, and certainly in patient education, that makes sure  that they really understand the risks with using these products that haven't  been fully evaluated, studied, like inhalational products should be over the  years.
Kyle:
And  from my standpoint, the biggest takeaways is knowing your resources. So again,  the CDC is a great resource that you can look at on your own, or you can take a  peek at your local poison center. All of them usually have great resources that  you can reference or use whenever you're doing patient counseling.
Kyle:
And  then from a clinical standpoint, realize it's a diagnosis of exclusion. So as  we're entering the virus season, flu season, and it's really hard to  differentiate. Is it a viral process? Is it a viral process plus a vaping  related injury or is it just a vaping related injury? So there's a lot of  unknowns that we have right now and just always keeping it in the back of your  head, that it's a possibility that this might be the sole cause or a  contributing component to the disease process. Just keep that in the back of  your mind, I think.
Tom  Kraus:
And  from my perspective from the regulatory side, I think we'll be watching to see  how the FDA asserts itself in regard to regulating these nicotine delivery  products. And with regard to some of the actions that it's already taken like  this partial ban on flavored products, will that actually be effective in  curbing youth initiation of vaping products?
Tom  Kraus:
Or  as some of the public health community has been concerned, are there too many  opportunities to access these products despite that partial ban, that youth are  going to continue initiating use of these vaping products?
Tom  Kraus:
So  this scenario well we'll continue to see changes in how the federal government  approaches vaping and tobacco product regulation generally, and we'll continue  to be engaged from ASHPs perspective.
Norman:
That's  all the time we have today. I do want to thank Tom Kraus, Kim Novak and Kyle Mays  for joining us today to discuss the vaping epidemic. Join us here every  Thursday, where we will be talking with ASHP member content matter experts on a  variety of clinical topics.
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