Neophytou Andreas M, White Marquitta J, Oh Sam S, Thakur Neeta, Galanter Joshua M, Nishimura Katherine K, Pino-Yanes Maria, Torgerson Dara G, Gignoux Christopher R, Eng Celeste, Nguyen Elizabeth A, Hu Donglei, Mak Angel C, Kumar Rajesh, Seibold Max A, Davis Adam, Farber Harold J, Meade Kelley, Avila Pedro C, Serebrisky Denise, Lenoir Michael A, Brigino-Buenaventura Emerita, Rodriguez-Cintron William, Bibbins-Domingo Kirsten, Thyne Shannon M, Williams L Keoki, Sen Saunak, Gilliland Frank D, Gauderman W James, Rodriguez-Santana Jose R, Lurmann Fred, Balmes John R, Eisen Ellen A, Burchard Esteban G
1 Division of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California.
2 Department of Medicine.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2016 Jun 1;193(11):1271-80. doi: 10.1164/rccm.201508-1706OC.
Adverse effects of exposures to ambient air pollution on lung function are well documented, but evidence in racial/ethnic minority children is lacking.
To assess the relationship between air pollution and lung function in minority children with asthma and possible modification by global genetic ancestry.
The study population consisted of 1,449 Latino and 519 African American children with asthma from five different geographical regions in the mainland United States and Puerto Rico. We examined five pollutants (particulate matter ≤10 μm and ≤2.5 μm in diameter, ozone, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide), derived from participant residential history and ambient air monitoring data, and assessed over several time windows. We fit generalized additive models for associations between pollutant exposures and lung function parameters and tested for interaction terms between exposures and genetic ancestry.
A 5 μg/m(3) increase in average lifetime particulate matter less than or equal to 2.5 μm in diameter exposure was associated with a 7.7% decrease in FEV1 (95% confidence interval = -11.8 to -3.5%) in the overall study population. Global genetic ancestry did not appear to significantly modify these associations, but percent African ancestry was a significant predictor of lung function.
Early-life particulate exposures were associated with reduced lung function in Latino and African American children with asthma. This is the first study to report an association between exposure to particulates and reduced lung function in minority children in which racial/ethnic status was measured by ancestry-informative markers.
暴露于环境空气污染对肺功能的不良影响已有充分记录,但在少数族裔儿童中缺乏相关证据。
评估空气污染与患有哮喘的少数族裔儿童肺功能之间的关系,以及全球遗传血统可能产生的影响。
研究人群包括来自美国本土五个不同地理区域和波多黎各的1449名患有哮喘的拉丁裔儿童和519名非裔美国儿童。我们研究了五种污染物(直径≤10μm和≤2.5μm的颗粒物、臭氧、二氧化氮和二氧化硫),这些污染物来自参与者的居住史和环境空气监测数据,并在多个时间窗口进行评估。我们拟合了广义相加模型来分析污染物暴露与肺功能参数之间的关联,并测试了暴露与遗传血统之间的交互项。
在整个研究人群中,平均终生暴露于直径小于或等于2.5μm的颗粒物每增加5μg/m³,与第一秒用力呼气容积(FEV1)下降7.7%相关(95%置信区间=-11.8%至-3.5%)。全球遗传血统似乎并未显著改变这些关联,但非洲血统百分比是肺功能的一个显著预测因素。
早年接触颗粒物与患有哮喘的拉丁裔和非裔美国儿童的肺功能降低有关。这是第一项报告接触颗粒物与少数族裔儿童肺功能降低之间存在关联的研究,其中少数族裔/种族地位是通过具有祖先信息的标记物来衡量的。