AI Article Synopsis

  • The study reviews global research linking short-term exposure to particulate matter (PM) with various health issues, particularly focusing on mortality rates.
  • It systematically analyzed studies up to July 2015, assessing how different PM constituents affect health outcomes like all-cause, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality in adults.
  • Results showed significant increases in mortality rates associated with PM exposure, highlighting the need to consider city-specific factors that might influence these effects.

Article Abstract

Background: The link between PM exposure and adverse health outcomes is well documented from studies across the world. However, the reported effect estimates vary across studies, locations and constituents. We aimed to conduct a meta-analysis on associations between short-term exposure to PM constituents and mortality using city-specific estimates, and explore factors that may explain some of the observed heterogeneity.

Methods: We systematically reviewed epidemiological studies on particle constituents and mortality using PubMed and Web of Science databases up to July 2015.We included studies that examined the association between short-term exposure to PM constituents and all-cause, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality, in the general adult population. Each study was summarized based on pre-specified study key parameters (e.g., location, time period, population, diagnostic classification standard), and we evaluated the risk of bias using the Office of Health Assessment and Translation (OHAT) Method for each included study. We extracted city-specific mortality risk estimates for each constituent and cause of mortality. For multi-city studies, we requested the city-specific risk estimates from the authors unless reported in the article. We performed random effects meta-analyses using city-specific estimates, and examined whether the effects vary across regions and city characteristics (PM concentration levels, air temperature, elevation, vegetation, size of elderly population, population density, and baseline mortality).

Results: We found a 0.89% (95% CI: 0.68, 1.10%) increase in all-cause, a 0.80% (95% CI: 0.41, 1.20%) increase in cardiovascular, and a 1.10% (95% CI: 0.59, 1.62%) increase in respiratory mortality per 10μg/m increase in PM. Accounting for the downward bias induced by studies of single days, the all-cause mortality estimate increased to 1.01% (95% CI: 0.81, 1.20%). We found significant associations between mortality and several PM constituents. The most consistent and stronger associations were observed for elemental carbon (EC) and potassium (K). For most of the constituents, we observed high variability of effect estimates across cities.

Conclusions: Our meta-analysis suggests that (a) combustion elements such as EC and K have a stronger association with mortality, (b) single lag studies underestimate effects, and (c) estimates of PM and constituents differ across regions. Accounting for PM mass in constituent's health models may lead to more stable and comparable effect estimates across different studies.

Systematic Review Registration: PROSPERO: CRD42017055765.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5689473PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2017.09.010DOI Listing

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