Cardiology Division, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, 55 Fruit St, Yawkey 5E, Boston, MA 02114-2750, USA.
Cardiovascular Imaging Research Center, Departments of Medicine and Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, 165 Cambridge St., Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Eur Heart J. 2021 Feb 14;42(7):761-772. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa982.
Air pollution [i.e. particulate matter with diameter <2.5 μm (PM2.5)] is a risk factor for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). While PM2.5 promotes leucopoiesis and atherosclerotic inflammation in experimental models, it is unknown whether this occurs in humans. We tested in humans (a) whether PM2.5 associates with higher leucopoietic tissue activity and arterial inflammation (ArtI), (ii) whether these associations persist after accounting for the effects of potential confounders including socioeconomics, traffic noise, and risk factors, and (iii) whether these tissue effects mediate the association between air pollution and MACE.
Individuals (N = 503) without cardiovascular disease (CVD) or active malignancy underwent 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography. Major adverse cardiovascular event was adjudicated over 5 years of follow-up. Leucopoietic tissue activity (in bone marrow and spleen) as well as ArtI were measured. Annual PM2.5 levels were assessed at each individual's home address. At baseline, higher PM2.5 associated with increased leucopoietic activity [standardized (95% CI): 0.129 (0.042, 0.215), P = 0.004] as well as ArtI [0.088 (0.006, 0.171), P = 0.036] after adjusting for CVD risk factors. Over a median 4.1 years, 40 individuals experienced MACE. PM2.5 exposure associated with MACE [Cox HR (95% CI): 1.404 (1.135, 1.737), P = 0.002], remaining significant after adjustment for CVD risk factors and other potential confounders. Mediation analysis demonstrated that increased leucopoietic activity and ArtI serially mediate the link between PM2.5 exposure and MACE.
Higher air pollution exposure associates with heightened leucopoietic activity and ArtI and independently predicts MACE through a biological pathway that includes higher leucopoietic activity and ArtI in series.
空气污染(即直径<2.5μm 的颗粒物(PM2.5))是主要不良心血管事件(MACE)的危险因素。虽然 PM2.5 在实验模型中促进白细胞生成和动脉粥样硬化炎症,但尚不清楚在人类中是否存在这种情况。我们在人类中测试了(a)PM2.5 是否与更高的白细胞生成组织活性和动脉炎症(ArtI)相关,(ii)在考虑包括社会经济、交通噪音和危险因素在内的潜在混杂因素的影响后,这些关联是否仍然存在,以及(iii)这些组织效应是否介导空气污染与 MACE 之间的关联。
没有心血管疾病(CVD)或活动性恶性肿瘤的个体(N=503)接受 18 F-氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描/计算机断层扫描。主要不良心血管事件在 5 年的随访中进行裁决。测量白细胞生成组织活性(骨髓和脾脏)和 ArtI。在每个人的家庭住址评估每年的 PM2.5 水平。在基线时,较高的 PM2.5 与更高的白细胞生成活性相关[标准化(95%置信区间):0.129(0.042,0.215),P=0.004]和 ArtI[0.088(0.006,0.171),P=0.036],调整 CVD 危险因素后。在中位数为 4.1 年的时间里,有 40 人经历了 MACE。PM2.5 暴露与 MACE 相关[Cox HR(95%置信区间):1.404(1.135,1.737),P=0.002],在调整 CVD 危险因素和其他潜在混杂因素后仍然显著。中介分析表明,白细胞生成活性和 ArtI 的增加依次介导 PM2.5 暴露与 MACE 之间的联系。
较高的空气污染暴露与白细胞生成活性和 ArtI 增加相关,并通过包括白细胞生成活性和 ArtI 增加的生物学途径独立预测 MACE。