University of Florida, College of Public Health and Health Professions, Department of Environmental and Global Health, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
University of Florida, College of Public Health and Health Professions, Department of Environmental and Global Health, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Environ Res. 2021 May;196:110374. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110374. Epub 2020 Oct 22.
Admissions of newborn infants into Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICU) has increased in the US over the last decade yet the role of environmental exposures as a risk factor for NICU admissions is under studied. Our study aims to determine the ecologic association between acute and intermediate ambient PM2.5 exposure durations and rates of NICU admissions, and to explore whether this association differs by area-level social stressors and meteorological factors. We conducted an ecologic time-series analysis of singleton neonates (N = 1,027,797) born in Florida hospitals between December 26, 2011 to April 30, 2019. We used electronic medical records (EMRs) in the OneFlorida Data Trust and included infants with a ZIP code in a Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA) and excluded extreme preterm births (<24wks gestation). The study outcome is the number of daily NICU admission at 28 days old or younger for each ZIP code in the study area. The exposures of interest are average same day, 1- and 2-day lags, and 1-3 weeks ambient PM2.5 concentration at the ZIP code-level estimated using inverse distance weighting (IDW) for each day of the study period. We used a zero-inflated Poisson regression mixed effects models to estimate adjusted associations between acute and intermediate PM2.5 exposure durations and NICU admissions rates. NICU admissions rates increased over time during the study period. Ambient 7-day average PM2.5 concentrations was significantly associated with incidence of NICU admissions, with an interquartile range (IQR = 2.37 μg/m) increase associated with a 1.4% (95% CI: 0.4%, 2.4%) higher adjusted incidence of daily NICU admissions. No other exposure duration metrics showed a significant association with daily NICU admission rates. The magnitude of the association between PM2.5 7-day average concentrations with NICU admissions was significantly (p < 0.05) higher among ZIP codes with higher proportions of non-Hispanic Blacks, ZIP codes with household incomes in the lowest quartile, and on days with higher relative humidity. Our data shows a positive relationship between acute (7-day average) PM2.5 concentrations and daily NICU admissions in Metropolitan Statistical Areas of Florida. The observed associations were stronger in socioeconomically disadvantaged areas, areas with higher proportions with non-Hispanic Blacks, and on days with higher relative humidity. Further research is warranted to study other air pollutants and multipollutant effects and identify health conditions that are driving these associations with NICU admissions.
美国在过去十年中新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)的入院人数有所增加,但环境暴露作为 NICU 入院风险因素的作用仍研究不足。我们的研究旨在确定急性和中期环境 PM2.5 暴露持续时间与 NICU 入院率之间的生态关联,并探讨这种关联是否因区域社会压力源和气象因素而有所不同。我们对 2011 年 12 月 26 日至 2019 年 4 月 30 日期间在佛罗里达州医院出生的单胎新生儿(N=1,027,797)进行了生态时间序列分析。我们使用 OneFlorida Data Trust 中的电子病历(EMR),并纳入了大都市统计区(MSA)中具有邮政编码的婴儿,并排除了极早产(<24 周妊娠)。研究结果是研究区域内每个邮政编码每天 28 天或更小时的 NICU 入院人数。感兴趣的暴露是平均当日、1 天和 2 天滞后以及 1 周至 3 周的环境 PM2.5 浓度,这些浓度使用 IDW 为研究期间的每一天进行估算。我们使用零膨胀泊松回归混合效应模型来估计急性和中期 PM2.5 暴露持续时间与 NICU 入院率之间的调整关联。在研究期间,NICU 入院率随着时间的推移而增加。环境 7 天平均 PM2.5 浓度与 NICU 入院率显著相关,与 IQR(四分位间距)为 2.37μg/m 的浓度升高相关,每日 NICU 入院率增加 1.4%(95%CI:0.4%,2.4%)。其他暴露持续时间指标与每日 NICU 入院率均无显著关联。PM2.5 7 天平均浓度与 NICU 入院率之间的关联强度在非西班牙裔黑人比例较高、家庭收入处于最低四分位数的邮政编码和相对湿度较高的日子里显著(p<0.05)更高。我们的数据显示,佛罗里达州大都市统计区的急性(7 天平均)PM2.5 浓度与每日 NICU 入院之间存在正相关关系。在社会经济处于不利地位的地区、非西班牙裔黑人比例较高的地区以及相对湿度较高的日子里,观察到的关联更强。需要进一步研究以研究其他空气污染物和多污染物效应,并确定推动这些与 NICU 入院相关的健康状况。