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Washington, DC - The CDC  released four reports on the ongoing EVALI outbreak. Key findings, published in Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) and the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), confirm a decline in emergency department (ED) visits related to EVALI. The findings also reinforce the link between Vitamin E acetate and EVALI and describe risk factors for EVALI rehospitalizations and deaths after hospital discharge; as such, CDC recommends that health care providers treating EVALI patients provide follow-up soon after hospital discharge.

The first NEJM report found that ED visits for EVALI rose sharply beginning in June 2019, peaking in September 2019. Since then, ED visits for EVALI have declined; however, ED visits remain higher than when the outbreak began in June 2019.

The second NEJM report strengthens prior CDC and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) findings on the link between Vitamin E acetate and EVALI. Building upon a previous study, CDC analyzed bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from a larger number of EVALI patients from 16 states and compared them to BAL fluid from healthy people. Vitamin E acetate, also found in product samples tested by the FDA and state laboratories, was identified in BAL fluid from 48 of 51 EVALI patients and was not found in any of the BAL fluids of healthy people.

CDC also released a study in the MMWR comparing EVALI patients who were rehospitalized, or who later died after hospital discharge, to other EVALI patients. Among the 2,409 U.S. EVALI cases reported to CDC as of December 10, 2019, 31 patients were hospitalized and seven died after hospital discharge. Among these patients, the median time to rehospitalization was four days and the median time to death after hospital discharge was three days.

EVALI patients requiring rehospitalization were more likely than other EVALI patients to have a history of chronic conditions such as heart disease, respiratory conditions, and diabetes. In addition, EVALI patients who died after hospital discharge were more likely to be 50 years or older.

“It is important that physicians and clinical providers work with EVALI patients to ensure follow-up care within two days,” said CDC Director Robert R. Redfield, M.D. “A follow-up visit with a primary care physician is especially important for EVALI patients with underlying chronic conditions. Ensuring this timely medical attention and monitoring can save lives.”

These findings have led CDC to update its clinical guidance in a second MMWR article. The guidance recommends that patients be clinically stable before discharge and have a follow up with a clinical provider within 48 hours of hospital discharge — a shorter follow-up time than the previous recommendation of one to two weeks. This report also provides tools for clinicians, including an updated algorithm for management of patients with suspected EVALI, a fact sheet for clinicians, and an EVALI Discharge Readiness Checklist.

Current Recommendations from CDC and FDA

Regardless of the ongoing investigation:

CDC will continue to update guidance, as appropriate, as new data becomes available from this complex outbreak.