Coarse Particulate Air Pollution and Daily Mortality: A Global Study in 205 Cities
Journal
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Journal Volume
206
Journal Issue
8
Pages
999
Date Issued
2022-10-15
Author(s)
Liu, Cong
Cai, Jing
Chen, Renjie
Sera, Francesco
Guo, Yuming
Tong, Shilu
Li, Shanshan
Lavigne, Eric
Correa, Patricia Matus
Ortega, Nicolas Valdes
Orru, Hans
Maasikmets, Marek
Jaakkola, Jouni J K
Ryti, Niilo
Breitner, Susanne
Schneider, Alexandra
Katsouyanni, Klea
Samoli, Evangelia
Hashizume, Masahiro
Honda, Yasushi
Ng, Chris Fook Sheng
Diaz, Magali Hurtado
la Cruz Valencia, César De
Rao, Shilpa
Palomares, Alfonso Diz-Lois
Pereira da Silva, Susana
Madureira, Joana
Holobâc, Iulian Horia
Fratianni, Simona
Scovronick, Noah
Garland, Rebecca M
Tobias, Aurelio
Íñiguez, Carmen
Forsberg, Bertil
Åström, Christofer
Vicedo-Cabrera, Ana Maria
Ragettli, Martina S
Pan, Shih-Chun
Milojevic, Ai
Bell, Michelle L
Zanobetti, Antonella
Schwartz, Joel
Gasparrini, Antonio
Kan, Haidong
Abstract
Rationale: The associations between ambient coarse particulate matter (PM2.5-10) and daily mortality are not fully understood on a global scale. Objectives: To evaluate the short-term associations between PM2.5-10 and total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality across multiple countries/regions worldwide. Methods: We collected daily mortality (total, cardiovascular, and respiratory) and air pollution data from 205 cities in 20 countries/regions. Concentrations of PM2.5-10 were computed as the difference between inhalable and fine PM. A two-stage time-series analytic approach was applied, with overdispersed generalized linear models and multilevel meta-analysis. We fitted two-pollutant models to test the independent effect of PM2.5-10 from copollutants (fine PM, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, ozone, and carbon monoxide). Exposure-response relationship curves were pooled, and regional analyses were conducted. Measurements and Main Results: A 10 μg/m3 increase in PM2.5-10 concentration on lag 0-1 day was associated with increments of 0.51% (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.18%-0.84%), 0.43% (95% CI, 0.15%-0.71%), and 0.41% (95% CI, 0.06%-0.77%) in total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality, respectively. The associations varied by country and region. These associations were robust to adjustment by all copollutants in two-pollutant models, especially for PM2.5. The exposure-response curves for total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality were positive, with steeper slopes at lower exposure ranges and without discernible thresholds. Conclusions: This study provides novel global evidence on the robust and independent associations between short-term exposure to ambient PM2.5-10 and total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality, suggesting the need to establish a unique guideline or regulatory limit for daily concentrations of PM2.5-10.
Subjects
PM2.5-10; air pollution; mortality; multicenter study; time-series study
Publisher
AMER THORACIC SOC
Type
journal article