冲突地区以外的军事吸入性暴露与慢性呼吸道症状

Military Inhalational Exposures Outside the Theater of Conflict and Chronic Respiratory Symptoms.

作者信息

Hosseini Reza, Garshick Eric, Slade Martin D, Timmons Andrew, Korpak Anna M, Smith Nicholas L, Nakayama Karen S, Baird Coleen P, Ciminera Paul, Kheradmand Farrah, Fan Vincent S, Hart Jaime E, Koutrakis Petros, Kuschner Ware Glenn, Ioachimescu Octavian C, Jerrett Michael, Montgrain Philippe R, Proctor Susan P, Wendt Christine H, Wongtrakool Cherry, Wan Emily S, Blanc Paul D, Redlich Carrie A

机构信息

Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.

Occupational and Environmental Medicine Section, Upstate Medical University, State University of New York, Syracuse.

出版信息

JAMA Netw Open. 2025 Jul 1;8(7):e2522080. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.22080.

Abstract

IMPORTANCE

Deployment to Afghanistan and Southwest Asia has been associated with adverse respiratory health outcomes. However, the impact of inhalational exposures (eg, vapor, dust, gas, fumes), which are known correlates of reduced lung function and future chronic lung disease, during military service time outside this deployment period has not been assessed.

OBJECTIVE

To assess military inhalational exposures during nonwartime routine activities and their associations with chronic respiratory symptoms.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study used data from the US Department of Veterans Affairs Service and Health Among Deployed Veterans study. US veterans who served between October 7, 2001, and February 28, 2017; deployed to Afghanistan or Southwest Asia; and living near 6 Veterans Affairs sites were randomly selected from Defense Manpower Data Center records. Participants completed interviewer-administered multi-item questionnaires about 29 exposures related to active duty military service time when not deployed. Onsite visits occurred between April 27, 2018, and March 13, 2020, and analyses were performed between April 1, 2023, and February 10, 2025.

EXPOSURE

Inhalation exposures during active duty military service time.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES

The main outcomes were chronic respiratory symptoms of dyspnea, wheeze in the previous 12 months, and chronic bronchitis. Using factor analysis, the 29 exposures were reduced to 20 items and categorized into 5 factors. Responses were scored ordinally (0, 1, 2) according to exposure prevalence and duration. Generalized linear modeling was used to explore associations between exposures and chronic respiratory symptoms.

RESULTS

The sample included 1712 veterans (median [IQR] age, 37 [33-45] years; 1522 male [88.9%]) who had military service other than during their deployment to Afghanistan or Southwest Asia. The median (IQR) total active duty military service duration was 77 (57-128) months, with 82.8% of their service time spent outside the theater of conflict. The prevalence of dyspnea, chronic bronchitis, and wheeze was 7.0% (117 participants), 7.1% (121 participants), and 15.2% (260 participants), respectively. The most commonly reported exposure categories were combustion and ground dust (1014 participants [59.2%]), aircraft maintenance (812 participants [47.4%]), and heavy equipment maintenance (783 participants [45.7%]). Adjusted multivariable analyses identified significant associations between heavy equipment maintenance exposures and dyspnea (odds ratio [OR], 1.33; 95% CI, 1.06-1.68) and wheeze (OR, 1.29; 95% CI, 1.10-1.52). Aircraft maintenance exposures were significantly associated with wheeze (OR, 1.22; 95% CI, 1.01-1.47). No statistically significant associations were found between these exposures and chronic bronchitis.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE

This cross-sectional study shows significant associations between heavy equipment maintenance and aircraft maintenance inhalation exposures outside of deployment with chronic respiratory symptoms among US veterans. These findings suggest that certain military inhalational exposures may contribute to the development of chronic lung disease and that policy interventions to reduce such exposures may protect the long-term respiratory health of military personnel.

摘要

重要性

部署到阿富汗和西南亚与不良呼吸健康结果相关。然而,在这一部署期之外的军事服役期间,吸入性暴露(如蒸汽、灰尘、气体、烟雾)的影响尚未得到评估,而这些暴露已知与肺功能下降和未来慢性肺病相关。

目的

评估非战时日常活动期间的军事吸入性暴露及其与慢性呼吸道症状的关联。

设计、地点和参与者:这项横断面研究使用了美国退伍军人事务部“部署退伍军人的服务与健康”研究的数据。从国防人力数据中心记录中随机选取在2001年10月7日至2017年2月28日期间服役、部署到阿富汗或西南亚且居住在6个退伍军人事务站点附近的美国退伍军人。参与者完成了由访谈员管理的关于与未部署时现役军事服役时间相关的29种暴露的多项目问卷。现场访问在2018年4月27日至2020年3月13日期间进行,分析在2023年4月1日至2025年2月10日期间进行。

暴露

现役军事服役期间的吸入性暴露。

主要结局和测量指标

主要结局是过去12个月内的慢性呼吸道症状,即呼吸困难、喘息和慢性支气管炎。通过因子分析,将29种暴露减少到20项,并分为5个因子。根据暴露患病率和持续时间,对回答进行有序评分(0、1、2)。使用广义线性模型探讨暴露与慢性呼吸道症状之间的关联。

结果

样本包括1712名退伍军人(年龄中位数[四分位间距]为37[33 - 45]岁;1522名男性[88.9%]),他们在部署到阿富汗或西南亚之外有军事服役经历。现役军事服役总时长的中位数(四分位间距)为77(57 - 128)个月,其中82.8%的服役时间在冲突地区之外度过。呼吸困难、慢性支气管炎和喘息的患病率分别为7.0%(117名参与者)、7.1%(121名参与者)和15.2%(260名参与者)。最常报告的暴露类别是燃烧和地面灰尘(1014名参与者[59.2%])、飞机维修(812名参与者[47.4%])和重型设备维修(783名参与者[45.7%])。调整后的多变量分析确定了重型设备维修暴露与呼吸困难(优势比[OR],1.33;95%置信区间,1.06 - 1.68)和喘息(OR,1.29;95%置信区间,1.10 - 1.52)之间存在显著关联。飞机维修暴露与喘息显著相关(OR,1.22;95%置信区间,1.01 - 1.47)。未发现这些暴露与慢性支气管炎之间存在统计学上的显著关联。

结论与意义

这项横断面研究表明,在美国退伍军人中,部署之外的重型设备维修和飞机维修吸入性暴露与慢性呼吸道症状之间存在显著关联。这些发现表明,某些军事吸入性暴露可能导致慢性肺病的发展,减少此类暴露的政策干预可能保护军事人员的长期呼吸健康。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/61d8/12281241/58d627d93c6b/jamanetwopen-e2522080-g001.jpg

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