Center for Public Health and Environmental Assessment, Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.
Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU), Oak Ridge, TN, USA.
Prev Med. 2022 Nov;164:107306. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107306. Epub 2022 Oct 14.
Air pollution exposure is associated with negative health consequences among children and adolescents. Physical activity is recommended for all children/adolescents due to benefits to health and development. However, it is unclear if physically active children have additional protective benefits when exposed to higher levels of air pollution, compared to less active children. This systematic review evaluates all available literature since 2000 and examines if effect measure modification (EMM) exists between air pollution exposure and health outcomes among children/adolescents partaking in regular physical activity. PubMed, Science Direct, Scopus, Web of Science, and ProQuest Agricultural & Environmental Science databases were queried, identifying 2686 articles. Title/abstract screening and full-text review eliminated 2620 articles, and 56 articles were removed for evaluating individuals >21, leaving 10 articles for review. Of the included articles, half were conducted in China, three in the United States, and one each in Indonesia and Germany. Seven articles identified EMM between active children and air-pollution related health outcomes. Five of these indicated that children/adolescents do not experience any additional benefits from being physically active in higher levels of air pollution, with some studies implying active children may experience additional detriments, compared to less active children. However, the remaining two EMM studies highlighted modest benefits of having a higher activity level, even in polluted air. Overall, active children/adolescents may be at greater risk from air pollution exposure, but results were not consistent across all studies. Future studies assessing the intersection between air pollution and regular physical activity among children would be useful.
空气污染暴露与儿童和青少年的负面健康后果有关。由于对健康和发育有益,建议所有儿童/青少年进行身体活动。然而,目前尚不清楚与不活跃的儿童相比,活跃的儿童在暴露于更高水平的空气污染时是否具有额外的保护益处。本系统评价评估了 2000 年以来所有可用的文献,并研究了在经常进行身体活动的儿童/青少年中,空气污染暴露与健康结果之间是否存在效应量修正(EMM)。检索了 PubMed、Science Direct、Scopus、Web of Science 和 ProQuest 农业与环境科学数据库,共确定了 2686 篇文章。通过标题/摘要筛选和全文审查,排除了 2620 篇文章,有 56 篇文章因评估个体>21 岁而被排除,留下 10 篇文章进行综述。在纳入的文章中,一半的文章在中国进行,三篇在美国进行,一篇在印度尼西亚,一篇在德国。有 7 篇文章确定了活跃儿童与与空气污染相关的健康结果之间的 EMM。其中 5 篇文章表明,在较高水平的空气污染中,活跃的儿童/青少年不会从身体活动中获得任何额外的益处,一些研究表明,与不活跃的儿童相比,活跃的儿童可能会受到额外的损害。然而,其余两项 EMM 研究强调了即使在污染空气中,较高的活动水平也有适度的益处。总体而言,活跃的儿童/青少年可能面临更大的空气污染暴露风险,但并非所有研究的结果都一致。未来研究评估儿童中空气污染与定期身体活动之间的交叉点将是有用的。