Williams Lori A, Ulrich Cornelia M, Larson Timothy, Wener Mark H, Wood Brent, Campbell Peter T, Potter John D, McTiernan Anne, De Roos Anneclaire J
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98109-1024, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2009 Mar;117(3):373-8. doi: 10.1289/ehp.11580. Epub 2008 Oct 16.
Traffic-related air pollution has been associated with adverse health outcomes, and the immune system may be a biologic mediator of health effects.
We analyzed associations between living near major roads and immune status as measured by five immune assays. We hypothesized that living near a freeway, arterial, or truck route would be associated with increased inflammation and decreased immune function.
We used a geographic information system (GIS) to determine residential proximity to major roads among 115 postmenopausal, overweight women in the greater Seattle, Washington (USA), area whose immunity was assessed at the baseline visit of an exercise intervention trial. We evaluated three inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein, serum amyloid A, and interleukin-6) and two functional assays of cellular immunity [natural killer (NK) cell cytotoxicity and T-lymphocyte proliferation].
Women living within 150 m of arterial roads had 21% lower NK cytotoxicity compared with women who lived farther from an arterial [mean cytotoxicity, 19.5%; 95% confidence interval (CI), 15.6-23.5%; vs. mean cytotoxicity, 24.8%; 95% CI, 22.0-27.5%], after adjustment for both individual-level and census tract-level demographic characteristics. This association was limited to women who reported exercising near traffic. Fewer women lived near freeways and truck routes. Markers of inflammation and lymphocyte proliferation did not consistently differ according to proximity to major roads.
If the observed association between residential proximity to traffic and decreased NK cytotoxicity is confirmed in other populations, our results may have implications for local land use policy.
与交通相关的空气污染已被证明与不良健康后果有关,免疫系统可能是健康影响的生物学介质。
我们通过五项免疫检测分析了居住在主要道路附近与免疫状态之间的关联。我们假设居住在高速公路、主干道或卡车路线附近会导致炎症增加和免疫功能下降。
我们使用地理信息系统(GIS)确定了美国华盛顿州大西雅图地区115名绝经后超重女性的住所与主要道路的距离,这些女性的免疫力在一项运动干预试验的基线访视时进行了评估。我们评估了三种炎症标志物(C反应蛋白、血清淀粉样蛋白A和白细胞介素-6)以及两种细胞免疫功能检测(自然杀伤(NK)细胞细胞毒性和T淋巴细胞增殖)。
在调整了个体层面和普查区层面的人口统计学特征后,居住在距离主干道150米以内的女性的NK细胞毒性比居住在离主干道较远的女性低21%[平均细胞毒性,19.5%;95%置信区间(CI),1