Rage E, Siroux V, Künzli N, Pin I, Kauffmann F
INSERM U780, 16 avenue Paul-Vaillant Couturier, Villejuif Cedex, France.
Occup Environ Med. 2009 Mar;66(3):182-8. doi: 10.1136/oem.2007.038349. Epub 2008 Nov 18.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: There is evidence that exposure to air pollution affects asthma, but the effect of air pollution on asthma severity has not been addressed. The aim was to assess the relation between asthma severity during the past 12 months and home outdoor concentrations of air pollution.
Asthma severity over the past 12 months was assessed in two complementary ways among 328 adult asthmatics from the French Epidemiological study on the Genetics and Environment of Asthma (EGEA) examined between 1991 and 1995. The four-class severity score integrated clinical events and type of treatment. The five-level asthma score is based only on the occurrence of symptoms. Nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)), sulphur dioxide (SO(2)) and ozone (O(3)) concentrations were assigned to each residence using two different methods. The first was based on the closest monitor data from 1991 to 1995. The second consisted of spatial models that used geostatistical interpolations and then assigned air pollutants to the geo-coded residences (1998).
Higher asthma severity score was significantly related to the 8-hour average of ozone during April-September (O(3)-8 h) and the number of days (O(3)-days) with 8-hour ozone averages above 110 microg.m(-3) (for a 36-day increase, equivalent to the interquartile range, in O(3)-days, odds ratio 2.22 (95% confidence interval 1.61 to 3.07) for one class difference in score). Adjustment for age, sex, smoking habits, occupational exposure, and educational level did not alter results. Asthma severity was unrelated to NO(2). Both exposure assessment methods and severity scores resulted in very similar findings. SO(2) correlated with severity but reached statistical significance only for the model-based assignment of exposure.
The observed associations between asthma severity and air pollution, in particular O(3), support the hypothesis that air pollution at levels far below current standards increases asthma severity.
背景/目的:有证据表明暴露于空气污染会影响哮喘,但空气污染对哮喘严重程度的影响尚未得到探讨。目的是评估过去12个月内哮喘严重程度与家庭室外空气污染浓度之间的关系。
在1991年至1995年接受检查的来自法国哮喘遗传学与环境流行病学研究(EGEA)的328名成年哮喘患者中,通过两种互补方法评估过去12个月内的哮喘严重程度。四级严重程度评分综合了临床事件和治疗类型。五级哮喘评分仅基于症状的发生情况。使用两种不同方法为每个住所分配二氧化氮(NO₂)、二氧化硫(SO₂)和臭氧(O₃)浓度。第一种方法基于1991年至1995年最近监测站的数据。第二种方法是空间模型,该模型使用地理统计插值,然后将空气污染物分配到地理编码的住所(1998年)。
较高的哮喘严重程度评分与4月至9月期间臭氧的8小时平均值(O₃ - 8小时)以及8小时臭氧平均值高于110μg.m⁻³的天数(O₃ - 天数)显著相关(对于O₃ - 天数增加36天,相当于四分位数间距,评分每相差一级,优势比为2.22(95%置信区间1.61至3.07))。对年龄、性别、吸烟习惯、职业暴露和教育水平进行调整后,结果未改变。哮喘严重程度与NO₂无关。两种暴露评估方法和严重程度评分均得出非常相似的结果。SO₂与严重程度相关,但仅在基于模型的暴露分配中达到统计学显著性。
观察到的哮喘严重程度与空气污染(尤其是O₃)之间的关联支持了以下假设,即远低于当前标准的空气污染水平会增加哮喘严重程度。