Gauderman W James, Vora Hita, McConnell Rob, Berhane Kiros, Gilliland Frank, Thomas Duncan, Lurmann Fred, Avol Edward, Kunzli Nino, Jerrett Michael, Peters John
Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California, 1540 Alcazar Street, Suite 220, Los Angeles, CA 90033, USA.
Lancet. 2007 Feb 17;369(9561):571-7. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(07)60037-3.
Whether local exposure to major roadways adversely affects lung-function growth during the period of rapid lung development that takes place between 10 and 18 years of age is unknown. This study investigated the association between residential exposure to traffic and 8-year lung-function growth.
In this prospective study, 3677 children (mean age 10 years [SD 0.44]) participated from 12 southern California communities that represent a wide range in regional air quality. Children were followed up for 8 years, with yearly lung-function measurements recorded. For each child, we identified several indicators of residential exposure to traffic from large roads. Regression analysis was used to establish whether 8-year growth in lung function was associated with local traffic exposure, and whether local traffic effects were independent of regional air quality.
Children who lived within 500 m of a freeway (motorway) had substantial deficits in 8-year growth of forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV(1), -81 mL, p=0.01 [95% CI -143 to -18]) and maximum midexpiratory flow rate (MMEF, -127 mL/s, p=0.03 [-243 to -11), compared with children who lived at least 1500 m from a freeway. Joint models showed that both local exposure to freeways and regional air pollution had detrimental, and independent, effects on lung-function growth. Pronounced deficits in attained lung function at age 18 years were recorded for those living within 500 m of a freeway, with mean percent-predicted 97.0% for FEV1 (p=0.013, relative to >1500 m [95% CI 94.6-99.4]) and 93.4% for MMEF (p=0.006 [95% CI 89.1-97.7]).
Local exposure to traffic on a freeway has adverse effects on children's lung development, which are independent of regional air quality, and which could result in important deficits in attained lung function in later life.
在10至18岁快速肺发育期间,居住在主要道路附近是否会对肺功能增长产生不利影响尚不清楚。本研究调查了居住环境暴露于交通污染与8年肺功能增长之间的关联。
在这项前瞻性研究中,来自南加州12个社区的3677名儿童(平均年龄10岁[标准差0.44])参与其中,这些社区代表了区域空气质量的广泛范围。对儿童进行了8年的随访,每年记录肺功能测量值。对于每个儿童,我们确定了几个居住环境暴露于主要道路交通污染的指标。采用回归分析来确定肺功能的8年增长是否与当地交通污染暴露相关,以及当地交通污染的影响是否独立于区域空气质量。
居住在高速公路500米范围内的儿童,其1秒用力呼气量(FEV1,-81毫升,p = 0.01 [95%置信区间-143至-18])和最大呼气中期流速(MMEF,-127毫升/秒,p = 0.03 [-243至-11])的8年增长存在显著不足,而居住在距离高速公路至少1500米处的儿童则不然。联合模型显示,居住环境暴露于高速公路和区域空气污染对肺功能增长均有有害且独立的影响。对于居住在高速公路500米范围内的儿童,18岁时达到的肺功能存在明显不足,FEV1的平均预测百分比为97.0%(p = 0.013,相对于>1500米处[95%置信区间94.6 - 99.4]),MMEF为93.4%(p = 0.006 [95%置信区间89.1 - 97.7])。
居住环境暴露于高速公路交通污染对儿童肺发育有不利影响,这种影响独立于区域空气质量,可能导致其成年后肺功能出现重要缺陷。