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  3. Temporal variations in the short-term effects of ambient air pollution on cardiovascular and respiratory mortality: a pooled analysis of 380 urban areas over a 22-year period.
 

Temporal variations in the short-term effects of ambient air pollution on cardiovascular and respiratory mortality: a pooled analysis of 380 urban areas over a 22-year period.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/36409
Publisher DOI
10.1016/S2542-5196(24)00168-2
PubMed ID
39243781
Description
Background
Ambient air pollution, including particulate matter (such as PM and PM) and nitrogen dioxide (NO), has been linked to increases in mortality. Whether populations' vulnerability to these pollutants has changed over time is unclear, and studies on this topic do not include multicountry analysis. We evaluated whether changes in exposure to air pollutants were associated with changes in mortality effect estimates over time.
Methods
We extracted cause-specific mortality and air pollution data collected between 1995 and 2016 from the Multi-Country Multi-City (MCC) Collaborative Research Network database. We applied a two-stage approach to analyse the short-term effects of NO, PM, and PM on cause-specific mortality using city-specific time series regression analyses and multilevel random-effects meta-analysis. We assessed changes over time using a longitudinal meta-regression with time as a linear fixed term and explored potential sources of heterogeneity and two-pollutant models.
Findings
Over 21·6 million cardiovascular and 7·7 million respiratory deaths in 380 cities across 24 countries over the study period were included in the analysis. All three air pollutants showed decreasing concentrations over time. The pooled results suggested no significant temporal change in the effect estimates per unit exposure of PM, PM, or NO and mortality. However, the risk of cardiovascular mortality increased from 0·37% (95% CI -0·05 to 0·80) in 1998 to 0·85% (0·55 to 1·16) in 2012 with a 10 μg/m increase in PM. Two-pollutant models generally showed similar results to single-pollutant models for PM fractions and indicated temporal differences for NO.
Interpretation
Although air pollution levels decreased during the study period, the effect sizes per unit increase in air pollution concentration have not changed. This observation might be due to the composition, toxicity, and sources of air pollution, as well as other factors, such as socioeconomic determinants or changes in population distribution and susceptibility.
Funding
None.
Date of Publication
2024-09
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Schwarz, Maximilian
Peters, Annette
Stafoggia, Massimo
de'Donato, Francesca
Sera, Francesco
Bell, Michelle L
Guo, Yuming
Honda, Yasushi
Huber, Veronika
Jaakkola, Jouni J K
Urban, Aleš
Vicedo-Cabrera, Ana Maria
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM) - Climate Change & Health
Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine
Masselot, Pierre
Lavigne, Eric
Achilleos, Souzana
Kyselý, Jan
Samoli, Evangelia
Hashizume, Masahiro
Fook Sheng Ng, Chris
das Neves Pereira da Silva, Susana
Madureira, Joana
Garland, Rebecca M
Tobias, Aurelio
Armstrong, Ben
Schwartz, Joel
Gasparrini, Antonio
Schneider, Alexandra
Breitner, Susanne
Additional Credits
Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research (OCCR)
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM) - Climate Change & Health
Series
The Lancet Planetary Health
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
2542-5196
Access(Rights)
open.access
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