Carter Ellison, Norris Christina, Dionisio Kathie L, Balakrishnan Kalpana, Checkley William, Clark Maggie L, Ghosh Santu, Jack Darby W, Kinney Patrick L, Marshall Julian D, Naeher Luke P, Peel Jennifer L, Sambandam Sankar, Schauer James J, Smith Kirk R, Wylie Blair J, Baumgartner Jill
Institute on the Environment, University of Minnesota , St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics & Occupational Health, McGill University , Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Environ Health Perspect. 2017 Jul 28;125(7):076002. doi: 10.1289/EHP767.
Household air pollution from solid fuel burning is a leading contributor to disease burden globally. Fine particulate matter (PM) is thought to be responsible for many of these health impacts. A co-pollutant, carbon monoxide (CO) has been widely used as a surrogate measure of PM in studies of household air pollution.
The goal was to evaluate the validity of exposure to CO as a surrogate of exposure to PM in studies of household air pollution and the consistency of the PM-CO relationship across different study settings and conditions.
We conducted a systematic review of studies with exposure and/or cooking area PM and CO measurements and assembled 2,048 PM and CO measurements from a subset of studies (18 cooking area studies and 9 personal exposure studies) retained in the systematic review. We conducted pooled multivariate analyses of PM-CO associations, evaluating fuels, urbanicity, season, study, and CO methods as covariates and effect modifiers.
We retained 61 of 70 studies for review, representing 27 countries. Reported PM-CO correlations () were lower for personal exposure (range: 0.22-0.97; median=0.57) than for cooking areas (range: 0.10-0.96; median=0.71). In the pooled analyses of personal exposure and cooking area concentrations, the variation in ln(CO) explained 13% and 48% of the variation in ln(PM), respectively.
Our results suggest that exposure to CO is not a consistently valid surrogate measure of exposure to PM. Studies measuring CO exposure as a surrogate measure of PM exposure should conduct local validation studies for different stove/fuel types and seasons. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP767.
固体燃料燃烧产生的家庭空气污染是全球疾病负担的主要促成因素。细颗粒物(PM)被认为是造成许多此类健康影响的原因。一种共同污染物一氧化碳(CO)在家庭空气污染研究中被广泛用作PM的替代测量指标。
目标是评估在家庭空气污染研究中,将接触CO作为接触PM的替代指标的有效性,以及不同研究环境和条件下PM-CO关系的一致性。
我们对测量接触情况和/或烹饪区域PM及CO的研究进行了系统评价,并从系统评价中保留的一部分研究(18项烹饪区域研究和9项个人接触研究)中收集了2048个PM和CO测量数据。我们对PM-CO关联进行了汇总多变量分析,将燃料、城市化程度、季节、研究以及CO测量方法作为协变量和效应修饰因素进行评估。
我们从70项研究中保留了61项进行综述,这些研究代表27个国家。报告的个人接触情况下的PM-CO相关性()低于烹饪区域(范围:0.22 - 0.97;中位数 = 0.57)(范围:0.10 - 0.96;中位数 = 0.71)。在个人接触浓度和烹饪区域浓度的汇总分析中,ln(CO) 的变化分别解释了ln(PM) 变化的13%和48%。
我们的结果表明,接触CO并非始终是接触PM的有效替代测量指标。将测量CO接触作为PM接触替代指标的研究,应针对不同炉灶/燃料类型和季节开展局部验证研究。https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP767