South Carolina Cancer Prevention and Control Program and Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2011 Aug;119(8):1130-5. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1002921. Epub 2011 Mar 31.
The association of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular outcomes with air pollution exposures has been well established in the literature. The number of studies examining chronic exposures in cohorts is growing, with more recent studies conducted among women finding risk estimates of greater magnitude. Questions remain regarding sex differences in the relationship of chronic particulate matter (PM) exposures with mortality and cardiovascular outcomes.
In this study we explored these associations in the all-male Health Professionals Follow-Up Study prospective cohort.
The same spatiotemporal exposure estimation models, similar outcomes, and biennially updated covariates were used as those previously applied in the female Nurses' Health Study cohort.
Among 17,545 men residing in the northeastern and midwestern United States, there were 2,813 deaths, including 746 cases of fatal coronary heart disease (CHD). An interquartile range change (4 µg/m3) in average exposure to PM ≤ 2.5 µm in diameter in the 12 previous months was not associated with all-cause mortality [hazard ratio (HR) = 0.94; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.87-1.00] or fatal CHD (HR = 0.99; 95% CI, 0.87-1.13) in fully adjusted models. Findings were similar for separate models of exposure to PM ≤ 10 µm in diameter and PM between 2.5 and 10 µm in diameter and for copollutant models.
Among this cohort of men with high socioeconomic status living in the midwestern and northeastern United States, the results did not support an association of chronic PM exposures with all-cause mortality and cardiovascular outcomes in models with time-varying covariates. Whether these findings suggest sex differences in susceptibility or the protective impact of healthier lifestyles and higher socioeconomic status requires additional investigation.
文献中已经充分证实了全因死亡率和心血管结局与空气污染暴露之间的关联。研究慢性暴露于队列中的研究数量不断增加,最近的研究发现女性的风险估计值更大。关于慢性颗粒物(PM)暴露与死亡率和心血管结局之间的关系中是否存在性别差异,仍存在一些问题。
在这项研究中,我们在全男性健康专业人员随访研究前瞻性队列中探讨了这些关联。
使用与之前在女性护士健康研究队列中应用的相同的时空暴露估计模型、类似的结局和每两年更新一次的协变量。
在美国东北部和中西部居住的 17545 名男性中,有 2813 人死亡,包括 746 例致命性冠心病(CHD)病例。在过去 12 个月中,平均暴露于直径≤2.5 µm 的 PM 每增加四分位距(4 µg/m3),与全因死亡率[风险比(HR)= 0.94;95%置信区间(CI),0.87-1.00]或致命性 CHD(HR = 0.99;95% CI,0.87-1.13)无关,在完全调整的模型中。对于单独的暴露于直径≤10 µm 的 PM 模型、直径在 2.5 至 10 µm 之间的 PM 模型以及共污染物模型,结果也相似。
在这项居住在美国中西部和东北部、社会经济地位较高的男性队列中,结果不支持慢性 PM 暴露与全因死亡率和心血管结局之间存在关联的模型,该模型具有时变协变量。这些发现是否表明易感性或更健康的生活方式和更高的社会经济地位的保护作用存在性别差异,需要进一步研究。