Sell Paulina, Plass Dietrich, Kienzler Sarah, Zeeb Hajo
Department for Exposure Assessment and Environmental Health Indicators, German Environment Agency, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Prevention and Evaluation, Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology - BIPS, Bremen, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Jan 7;25(1):79. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-21200-6.
Exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO) is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular, respiratory, and other diseases and health outcomes. Although NO emissions have decreased in Germany, concentrations currently observed still pose a threat to population health. The aim of this study is to estimate the environmental burden of disease (EBD) resulting from long-term NO exposure in Germany from 2010 to 2021.
To estimate the attributable disease burden, World Health Organization's EBD approach was used. We first conducted a systematic literature review to identify exposure-response functions (ERFs) which mathematically represent the association between NO exposure and the health outcomes: asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), ischemic heart disease, lung cancer, stroke, and cardiovascular and respiratory mortality. Then, we estimated the years of life lost (YLL), years lived with disability (YLD) and, where possible, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) due to these health outcomes in Germany, using mostly publicly available data. In a third step, using the ERFs and modelled ambient NO exposure data, the fraction of the disease burden attributable to NO exposure was estimated for each health outcome and year, stratified by sex.
The systematic review yielded recent ERFs for some exposure-outcome pairs, but not always for both mortality and morbidity outcomes. A full DALY calculation was possible for COPD and T2DM. For the other outcomes, either only YLL or YLD were calculated. Summing up the estimated YLD and YLL of all outcomes, the burden of disease due to NO exposure in Germany decreased from 261,503 (95% UI 69,290-489,273) lost healthy years in 2010 to 100,032 (95% UI 24,558-191,715) in 2021.
Although the burden of disease attributable to NO exposure decreased from 2010 to 2021, NO still poses a threat to population health in Germany. While the current legal concentration limit was generally not exceeded in Germany in 2021, stricter new values proposed by WHO were frequently surpassed. When comparing the results to a previous assessment, it was obvious how strongly different input data impact the results. Transparent reporting of input data and discussing potential challenges when interpreting EBD results are critical.
接触二氧化氮(NO)与心血管疾病、呼吸系统疾病及其他疾病和健康问题的风险增加有关。尽管德国的NO排放量有所下降,但目前观测到的浓度仍对人群健康构成威胁。本研究的目的是估算2010年至2021年德国长期接触NO所导致的疾病环境负担(EBD)。
为估算可归因的疾病负担,采用了世界卫生组织的EBD方法。我们首先进行了系统的文献综述,以确定暴露-反应函数(ERF),该函数以数学方式表示NO暴露与健康结果之间的关联:哮喘、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)、2型糖尿病(T2DM)、缺血性心脏病、肺癌、中风以及心血管和呼吸疾病死亡率。然后,我们主要使用公开可得的数据,估算了德国因这些健康结果导致的寿命损失年数(YLL)、带病生存年数(YLD),并在可能的情况下估算了伤残调整生命年(DALY)。第三步,利用ERF和模拟的环境NO暴露数据,按性别分层估算了各健康结果和年份中可归因于NO暴露的疾病负担比例。
系统综述得出了一些暴露-结果对的最新ERF,但并非总是同时适用于死亡率和发病率结果。对于COPD和T2DM可以进行完整的DALY计算。对于其他结果,仅计算了YLL或YLD。将所有结果的估算YLD和YLL相加,德国因NO暴露导致的疾病负担从2010年的261,503(95% UI 69,290 - 489,273)个健康损失年降至2021年的100,032(95% UI 24,558 - 191,715)个。
尽管2010年至2021年期间因NO暴露导致的疾病负担有所下降,但NO在德国仍对人群健康构成威胁。虽然2021年德国总体上未超过当前法定浓度限值,但世界卫生组织提议的更严格的新值却经常被超过。将结果与先前的评估进行比较时,很明显不同的输入数据对结果的影响有多大。透明报告输入数据并在解释EBD结果时讨论潜在挑战至关重要。