Program in Public Health and Department of Epidemiology, Anteater Instruction and Research Office, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-3957, USA.
Environ Res. 2011 Jul;111(5):685-92. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2011.03.008. Epub 2011 Mar 30.
Previous studies reported adverse impacts of traffic-related air pollution exposure on pregnancy outcomes. Yet, little information exists on how effect estimates are impacted by the different exposure assessment methods employed in these studies.
To compare effect estimates for traffic-related air pollution exposure and preeclampsia, preterm birth (gestational age less than 37 weeks), and very preterm birth (gestational age less than 30 weeks) based on four commonly used exposure assessment methods.
We identified 81,186 singleton births during 1997-2006 at four hospitals in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, California. Exposures were assigned to individual subjects based on residential address at delivery using the nearest ambient monitoring station data [carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)), nitric oxide (NO), nitrogen oxides (NO(x)), ozone (O(3)), and particulate matter less than 2.5 (PM(2.5)) or less than 10 (PM(10))μm in aerodynamic diameter], both unadjusted and temporally adjusted land-use regression (LUR) model estimates (NO, NO(2), and NO(x)), CALINE4 line-source air dispersion model estimates (NO(x) and PM(2.5)), and a simple traffic-density measure. We employed unconditional logistic regression to analyze preeclampsia in our birth cohort, while for gestational age-matched risk sets with preterm and very preterm birth we employed conditional logistic regression.
We observed elevated risks for preeclampsia, preterm birth, and very preterm birth from maternal exposures to traffic air pollutants measured at ambient stations (CO, NO, NO(2), and NO(x)) and modeled through CALINE4 (NO(x) and PM(2.5)) and LUR (NO(2) and NO(x)). Increased risk of preterm birth and very preterm birth were also positively associated with PM(10) and PM(2.5) air pollution measured at ambient stations. For LUR-modeled NO(2) and NO(x) exposures, elevated risks for all the outcomes were observed in Los Angeles only--the region for which the LUR models were initially developed. Unadjusted LUR models often produced odds ratios somewhat larger in size than temporally adjusted models. The size of effect estimates was smaller for exposures based on simpler traffic density measures than the other exposure assessment methods.
We generally confirmed that traffic-related air pollution was associated with adverse reproductive outcomes regardless of the exposure assessment method employed, yet the size of the estimated effect depended on how both temporal and spatial variations were incorporated into exposure assessment. The LUR model was not transferable even between two contiguous areas within the same large metropolitan area in Southern California.
先前的研究报告指出,交通相关的空气污染暴露对妊娠结局有不良影响。然而,关于这些研究中使用的不同暴露评估方法如何影响效应估计的信息很少。
比较基于四种常用暴露评估方法的交通相关空气污染暴露与子痫前期、早产(妊娠 37 周以下)和极早产(妊娠 30 周以下)的效应估计值。
我们在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶县和橙县的四家医院识别了 1997 年至 2006 年期间的 81186 例单胎分娩。使用最接近的环境监测站数据[一氧化碳(CO)、二氧化氮(NO2)、一氧化氮(NO)、氮氧化物(NOx)、臭氧(O3)和空气动力学直径小于 2.5μm(PM2.5)或小于 10μm(PM10)的颗粒物],基于分娩时的居住地址为个体受试者分配暴露情况,包括未调整和时间调整的基于土地利用的回归(LUR)模型估计值(NO、NO2 和 NOx)、CALINE4 线源空气扩散模型估计值(NOx 和 PM2.5)和简单的交通密度测量值。我们采用非条件逻辑回归分析了我们出生队列中的子痫前期,而对于胎龄匹配的早产和极早产风险集,我们采用条件逻辑回归。
我们观察到母体暴露于环境监测站测量的交通空气污染物(CO、NO、NO2 和 NOx)和通过 CALINE4(NOx 和 PM2.5)和 LUR(NO2 和 NOx)模型化的交通空气污染物与子痫前期、早产和极早产风险增加相关。在环境监测站测量的 PM10 和 PM2.5 空气污染与早产和极早产风险也呈正相关。对于 LUR 模型化的 NO2 和 NOx 暴露,仅在洛杉矶(最初开发 LUR 模型的地区)观察到所有结局的风险增加。未调整的 LUR 模型产生的比值比大小通常比时间调整模型稍大。基于更简单的交通密度测量的暴露的效应估计值小于其他暴露评估方法。
我们通常证实交通相关的空气污染与不良生殖结局有关,无论使用何种暴露评估方法,但估计效应的大小取决于如何将时间和空间变化纳入暴露评估。即使在南加州同一个大的大都市区内的两个相邻区域,LUR 模型也不能转移。