Health Effects Institute, 75 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110-1940, United States.
Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences, University of Washington, 4225 Roosevelt Way N.E., Seattle, Washington 98105, United States.
Environ Sci Technol. 2024 Jul 23;58(29):12767-12783. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.3c09745. Epub 2024 Jul 11.
Although concentrations of ambient air pollution continue to decline in high-income regions, epidemiological studies document adverse health effects at levels below current standards in many countries. The Health Effects Institute (HEI) recently completed a comprehensive research initiative to investigate the health effects of long-term exposure to low levels of air pollution in the United States (U.S.), Canada, and Europe. We provide an overview and synthesis of the results of this initiative along with other key research, the strengths and limitations of the research, and remaining research needs. The three studies funded through the HEI initiative estimated the effects of long-term ambient exposure to fine particulate matter (PM), nitrogen dioxide, ozone, and other pollutants on a broad range of health outcomes, including cause-specific mortality and cardiovascular and respiratory morbidity. To ensure high quality research and comparability across studies, HEI worked actively with the study teams and engaged independent expert panels for project oversight and review. All three studies documented positive associations between mortality and exposure to PM below the U.S. National Ambient Air Quality Standards and current and proposed European Union limit values. Furthermore, the studies observed nonthreshold linear (U.S.), or supra-linear (Canada and Europe) exposure-response functions for PM and mortality. Heterogeneity was found in both the magnitude and shape of this association within and across studies. Strengths of the studies included the large populations (7-69 million), state-of-the-art exposure assessment methods, and thorough statistical analyses that applied novel methods. Future work is needed to better understand potential sources of heterogeneity in the findings across studies and regions. Other areas of future work include the changing and evolving nature of PM components and sources, including wildfires, and the role of indoor environments. This research initiative provided important new evidence of the adverse effects of long-term exposures to low levels of air pollution at and below current standards, suggesting that further reductions could yield larger benefits than previously anticipated.
尽管高收入地区的环境空气污染浓度持续下降,但许多国家的流行病学研究记录表明,在当前标准以下的水平仍存在不良健康影响。健康影响研究所(HEI)最近完成了一项全面的研究计划,旨在调查美国、加拿大和欧洲长期暴露于低水平空气污染对健康的影响。我们提供了该计划的结果概述和综合分析,以及其他关键研究、研究的优势和局限性以及剩余的研究需求。通过 HEI 计划资助的三项研究估计了长期环境暴露于细颗粒物(PM)、二氧化氮、臭氧和其他污染物对广泛健康结果的影响,包括特定原因的死亡率以及心血管和呼吸系统发病率。为了确保研究质量和各研究之间的可比性,HEI 积极与研究团队合作,并聘请独立专家小组对项目进行监督和审查。所有三项研究都记录了美国国家环境空气质量标准和当前及拟议的欧盟限值以下的 PM 暴露与死亡率之间的正相关关系。此外,这些研究观察到 PM 和死亡率之间存在非阈值线性(美国)或超线性(加拿大和欧洲)的暴露-反应关系。在研究内和跨研究中,都发现了这种关联的幅度和形状存在异质性。这些研究的优势包括庞大的人群(700 万至 6900 万)、最先进的暴露评估方法以及应用了新方法的彻底的统计分析。未来的工作需要更好地了解跨研究和跨地区的发现存在异质性的潜在原因。未来的工作领域还包括 PM 成分和来源(包括野火)的变化和演变性质以及室内环境的作用。这项研究计划提供了有关长期暴露于当前标准及以下水平的低水平空气污染的不良影响的重要新证据,表明进一步减少可能会带来比以前预期更大的益处。