Sahsuvaroglu Talar, Jerrett Michael, Sears Malcolm R, McConnell Rob, Finkelstein Norm, Arain Altaf, Newbold Bruce, Burnett Rick
School of Geography and Earth Sciences, 1280 King St West, Hamilton, L8S 4K1, Canada.
Environ Health. 2009 Apr 1;8:14. doi: 10.1186/1476-069X-8-14.
Variations in air pollution exposure within a community may be associated with asthma prevalence. However, studies conducted to date have produced inconsistent results, possibly due to errors in measurement of the exposures.
A standardized asthma survey was administered to children in grades one and eight in Hamilton, Canada, in 1994-95 (N approximately 1467). Exposure to air pollution was estimated in four ways: (1) distance from roadways; (2) interpolated surfaces for ozone, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter and nitrous oxides from seven to nine governmental monitoring stations; (3) a kriged nitrogen dioxide (NO2) surface based on a network of 100 passive NO2 monitors; and (4) a land use regression (LUR) model derived from the same monitoring network. Logistic regressions were used to test associations between asthma and air pollution, controlling for variables including neighbourhood income, dwelling value, state of housing, a deprivation index and smoking.
There were no significant associations between any of the exposure estimates and asthma in the whole population, but large effects were detected the subgroup of children without hayfever (predominately in girls). The most robust effects were observed for the association of asthma without hayfever and NO2LUR OR = 1.86 (95%CI, 1.59-2.16) in all girls and OR = 2.98 (95%CI, 0.98-9.06) for older girls, over an interquartile range increase and controlling for confounders.
Our findings indicate that traffic-related pollutants, such as NO2, are associated with asthma without overt evidence of other atopic disorders among female children living in a medium-sized Canadian city. The effects were sensitive to the method of exposure estimation. More refined exposure models produced the most robust associations.
社区内空气污染暴露的差异可能与哮喘患病率相关。然而,迄今为止进行的研究结果并不一致,这可能是由于暴露测量存在误差。
1994 - 1995年,对加拿大汉密尔顿市一年级和八年级的儿童进行了标准化哮喘调查(N约为1467)。通过四种方式估算空气污染暴露:(1)距道路的距离;(2)来自七至九个政府监测站的臭氧、二氧化硫、颗粒物和氮氧化物的插值表面;(3)基于100个被动式二氧化氮监测器网络的克里金二氧化氮(NO₂)表面;(4)从同一监测网络得出的土地利用回归(LUR)模型。使用逻辑回归来检验哮喘与空气污染之间的关联,并控制包括邻里收入、住宅价值、住房状况、贫困指数和吸烟等变量。
在整个人口中,任何暴露估算与哮喘之间均无显著关联,但在没有花粉热的儿童亚组中(主要是女孩)检测到了较大影响。在所有女孩中,没有花粉热的哮喘与NO₂ LUR之间的关联最为显著,OR = 1.86(95%CI,1.59 - 2.16),年龄较大的女孩中OR = 2.98(95%CI,0.98 - 9.06),在四分位间距增加并控制混杂因素的情况下。
我们的研究结果表明,在加拿大一个中等规模城市中生活的女童中,与交通相关的污染物,如NO₂,与没有其他特应性疾病明显证据的哮喘相关。这些影响对暴露估算方法敏感。更精细的暴露模型产生了最显著的关联。