McCormack Meredith C, Belli Andrew J, Waugh Darryn, Matsui Elizabeth C, Peng Roger D, Williams D'Ann L, Paulin Laura, Saha Anik, Aloe Charles M, Diette Gregory B, Breysse Patrick N, Hansel Nadia N
1 Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, and.
2 Department of Environmental Health Sciences, and.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2016 Dec;13(12):2125-2131. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201605-329OC.
There is limited evidence of the effect of exposure to heat on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) morbidity, and the interactive effect between indoor heat and air pollution has not been established.
To determine the effect of indoor and outdoor heat exposure on COPD morbidity and to determine whether air pollution concentrations modify the effect of temperature.
Sixty-nine participants with COPD were enrolled in a longitudinal cohort study, and data from the 601 participant days that occurred during the warm weather season were included in the analysis. Participants completed home environmental monitoring with measurement of temperature, relative humidity, and indoor air pollutants and simultaneous daily assessment of respiratory health with questionnaires and portable spirometry.
Participants had moderate to severe COPD and spent the majority of their time indoors. Increases in maximal indoor temperature were associated with worsening of daily Breathlessness, Cough, and Sputum Scale scores and increases in rescue inhaler use. The effect was detected on the same day and lags of 1 and 2 days. The detrimental effect of temperature on these outcomes increased with higher concentrations of indoor fine particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide (P < 0.05 for interaction terms). On days during which participants went outdoors, increases in maximal daily outdoor temperature were associated with increases in Breathlessness, Cough, and Sputum Scale scores after adjusting for outdoor pollution concentrations.
For patients with COPD who spend the majority of their time indoors, indoor heat exposure during the warmer months represents a modifiable environmental exposure that may contribute to respiratory morbidity. In the context of climate change, adaptive strategies that include optimization of indoor environmental conditions are needed to protect this high-risk group from the adverse health effects of heat.
关于暴露于高温对慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)发病率影响的证据有限,且室内高温与空气污染之间的交互作用尚未明确。
确定室内和室外高温暴露对COPD发病率的影响,并确定空气污染浓度是否会改变温度的影响。
69名COPD患者参与了一项纵向队列研究,分析纳入了温暖季节期间601个参与者日的数据。参与者完成家庭环境监测,测量温度、相对湿度和室内空气污染物,并通过问卷和便携式肺活量测定法同时进行每日呼吸健康评估。
参与者患有中度至重度COPD,且大部分时间待在室内。室内最高温度的升高与每日呼吸急促、咳嗽和痰液量表评分的恶化以及急救吸入器使用的增加有关。这种影响在当天以及滞后1天和2天时均可检测到。随着室内细颗粒物和二氧化氮浓度的升高,温度对这些结果的有害影响增大(交互项P<0.05)。在参与者外出的日子里,调整室外污染浓度后,每日最高室外温度的升高与呼吸急促、咳嗽和痰液量表评分的增加有关。
对于大部分时间待在室内的COPD患者,温暖月份的室内高温暴露是一种可改变的环境暴露因素,可能会导致呼吸疾病。在气候变化的背景下,需要采取包括优化室内环境条件在内的适应性策略,以保护这一高危人群免受高温对健康的不利影响。