Remigio Richard V, Buller Ian D, Bogle Michael S, Kamenetsky Maria E, Ammons Samantha, Bell Jesse E, Fisher Jared A, Freedman Neal D, Jones Rena R
Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, 9609 Medical Center Drive, MSC 9771, Rockville, MD, 20892-7991, USA.
DLH, LLC, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Int J Health Geogr. 2025 Apr 11;24(1):8. doi: 10.1186/s12942-025-00394-x.
Emissions from wildfire plumes are composed of modified biomass combustion by-products, including carcinogens. However, studies of the association between wildland fires (WF; includes wildfires, prescribed burns, and resource management fires) exposure and lung cancer are scant. We evaluated geographic patterns in these exposures and their association with lung cancer mortality (LCM) rates across the conterminous United States (US).
We extracted data from the Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity program (1997-2003) and derived county-level exposure metrics: WF density by area, WF density by population, the ratio between total burned land area and county area, and the ratio between total burned land area by population. We obtained sex-specific, county-level LCM rates for 2016-2020 from the National Center for Health Statistics. Counties with fewer than 10 cases were suppressed. To account for cigarette smoking, we first modeled residual values from a Poisson regression between cigarette smoking prevalence and sex-specific, age-adjusted LCM rates. We then used Lee's L statistic for bivariate spatial association to identify counties with statistically significant (p < 0.05) associations between WF exposures and these residuals. In a sensitivity analysis, we applied a false discovery rate correction to adjust for multiple comparisons.
We observed geographic variation in bivariate associations between large WFs and subsequent LCM rates across US counties while accounting for ever cigarette smoking prevalence. There were positive (high WF exposures and high LCM rate) clusters for males and females in counties within the mid-Appalachian region and Florida, and modest differences across WF metrics in the cluster patterns were observed across the Western US and Central regions. The most positive clusters were seen between WF density by area and LCM rates among women (n = 82 counties) and a similar geographic pattern among men (n = 75 counties). Similar patterns were observed for males and females in the western US, with clusters of high WF exposures and low LCM rates. After adjusting for multiple comparisons, a positive cluster pattern among both sexes persisted in Kentucky and Florida with area-based exposure metrics.
Our analysis identified counties outside the western US with wildfires associated with lung cancer mortality. Studies with individual-level exposure-response assessments are needed to evaluate this relationship further.
野火羽流排放物由经过改变的生物质燃烧副产品组成,其中包括致癌物。然而,关于野火(包括野火、规定火烧和资源管理用火)暴露与肺癌之间关联的研究却很少。我们评估了美国本土这些暴露的地理模式及其与肺癌死亡率(LCM)的关联。
我们从火烧严重程度监测趋势项目(1997 - 2003年)中提取数据,并得出县级暴露指标:按面积计算的野火密度、按人口计算的野火密度、总燃烧土地面积与县面积之比以及按人口计算的总燃烧土地面积之比。我们从国家卫生统计中心获取了2016 - 2020年按性别划分的县级肺癌死亡率。病例数少于10例的县被排除。为了考虑吸烟因素,我们首先对吸烟流行率与按性别、年龄调整的肺癌死亡率之间的泊松回归残差进行建模。然后,我们使用李的L统计量进行双变量空间关联分析,以确定野火暴露与这些残差之间存在统计学显著关联(p < 0.05)的县。在敏感性分析中,我们应用错误发现率校正来调整多重比较。
在考虑了曾经吸烟流行率的情况下,我们观察到美国各县大型野火与后续肺癌死亡率之间的双变量关联存在地理差异。在阿巴拉契亚中部地区和佛罗里达州的各县,男性和女性均出现了正向(高野火暴露和高肺癌死亡率)聚类,并且在美国西部和中部地区的聚类模式中,不同野火指标之间存在适度差异。女性中按面积计算的野火密度与肺癌死亡率之间出现的正向聚类最多(n = 82个县),男性中也观察到类似的地理模式(n = 75个县)。在美国西部,男性和女性也观察到类似模式,即高野火暴露和低肺癌死亡率的聚类。在调整多重比较后,肯塔基州和佛罗里达州按基于面积的暴露指标在两性中均持续存在正向聚类模式。
我们的分析确定了美国西部以外与肺癌死亡率相关的野火发生县。需要进行个体水平暴露 - 反应评估的研究来进一步评估这种关系。