Zeft Andrew S, Prahalad Sampath, Schneider Rayfel, Dedeoglu Fatma, Weiss Pamela F, Grom Alexei A, Mix Carter, Pope Rd C Arden
Pediatric Rheumatology, The Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, USA.
Clin Exp Rheumatol. 2016 Sep-Oct;34(5):946-952. Epub 2016 Sep 1.
Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is a measurable component of ambient pollution, and positive associations of short-term PM2.5 exposure with the clinical presentation of systemic onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA) in young children have been described in a regional cohort. Our objective was to further establish associations between short-term pollution exposures and the reported clinical event of SJIA onset in cases residing from multiple metropolitan regions.
A case-crossover study design was used to analyse associations of short-term PM2.5 exposures with the event of SJIA symptom onset from cases residing in five metropolitan regions. Time trends, seasonality, month, and weekday were controlled for by matching. Selected exposure windows (to 14 days) of PM2.5 were examined.
Positive, statistically significant associations between PM2.5 concentrations and elevated risk of SJIA were not observed. The most positive associations of short-term PM2.5 exposure with SJIA were in children <5.5 years (RR 1.75, 95% CI 0.85-3.62). An ad hoc extended pooled analysis including previously reported cases from Utah's metropolitan areas identified an increased risk of SJIA for children <5.5 years (RR = 1.76, 95% CI 1.07-2.89 per 10 μg/m3 increase in 3-day lagged moving average PM2.5).
In this multi-city, multi-period study small, statistically insignificant PM2.5-SJIA associations are observed. However, as found in prior study, the PM2.5-SJIA association is most suggestive in preschool aged children. Larger numbers of SJIA cases spatially located in geographic areas which experience a greater day to day ambient particulate burden may be required by the analysis to demonstrate effects.
细颗粒物(PM2.5)是环境污染的一个可测量成分,在一个地区队列研究中已描述了幼儿短期暴露于PM2.5与全身型幼年特发性关节炎(SJIA)临床表现之间的正相关关系。我们的目的是进一步确定短期污染暴露与来自多个大都市地区病例中报告的SJIA发病临床事件之间的关联。
采用病例交叉研究设计,分析居住在五个大都市地区的病例短期暴露于PM2.5与SJIA症状发作事件之间的关联。通过匹配控制时间趋势、季节性、月份和工作日。检查了选定的PM2.5暴露窗口(长达14天)。
未观察到PM2.5浓度与SJIA风险升高之间存在统计学上显著的正相关。短期暴露于PM2.5与SJIA的最显著正相关出现在年龄小于5.5岁的儿童中(相对危险度1.75,95%可信区间0.85 - 3.62)。一项包括犹他州大都市地区先前报告病例的临时扩展汇总分析发现,年龄小于5.5岁的儿童患SJIA的风险增加(每10μg/m³ 3天滞后移动平均PM2.5增加,相对危险度 = 1.76,95%可信区间1.07 - 2.89)。
在这项多城市、多时期研究中,观察到PM2.5与SJIA之间存在小的、统计学上不显著的关联。然而,正如先前研究中所发现的,PM2.5与SJIA的关联在学龄前儿童中最明显。分析可能需要更多在日常环境颗粒物负担更大的地理区域中的SJIA病例,以证明其影响。