Association between air pollutants and blood cell counts in pediatric patients with asthma: a retrospective observational study.

BMC Public Health

Department of Emergency Medicine, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Chang Gung University College of Medicine, No. 123, Dapi Road, Niaosong Township, Kaohsiung County 833, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan.

Published: January 2025

Background: Asthma is a common respiratory disease in children, and air pollution is a risk factor for pediatric asthma. However, how air pollution affects blood cells in pediatric patients with asthma remains unclear.

Methods: This retrospective observational study, performed in 2007-2018 at a medical center, enrolled non-trauma patients aged < 17 years who visited the emergency department and had asthma. Medical records and blood cell counts, including absolute neutrophil count (ANC), eosinophil count, and platelet count were extracted. The concentrations of PM, PM, sulfur dioxide (SO), nitrogen dioxide (NO), and ozone (O) were measured from 11 air-monitoring stations in Kaohsiung City.

Results: One-unit increases in PM (regression coefficient: 25.618; S.E.: 5.937; p < 0.001), PM (19.97; 3.541; p < 0.001), NO2 (70.681; 15.857; p < 0.001), SO (81.694; 30.339; p = 0.007), and O (23.42; 8.831; p = 0.022) on lag 0-6 (7 d average) correlated positively with ANC. One-unit increases in PM (0.859; 0.357; p = 0.016), PM (0.728; 0.213; p = 0.001), and SO (4.086; 1.811; p = 0.024) on lag 0-6 correlated positively with eosinophil count. Additionally, one-unit increases in PM (0.302; 0.101; p = 0.003) and PM (0.229; 0.06; p < 0.001) on lag 0-6 correlated positively with platelet count. In a two-pollutant model, the impacts of PM and PM on ANC and platelet count remained statistically significant after adjusting for other air pollutants. Additionally, PM correlated significantly with eosinophil count after adjusting for PM, NO, SO, and O. Quartile increases in PM and PM levels correlated positively with ANC, eosinophil count, and platelet count (all p for trend < 0.05).

Conclusions: PM, PM, and NO were independently and positively associated with ANC, PM was positively associated with eosinophil count, and PM and PM were positively associated with platelet count in pediatric patients with asthma. Our results highlight the relationship between air pollution and blood cell counts in pediatric patients with asthma.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21517-wDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pediatric patients
8
patients asthma
8
retrospective observational
8
observational study
8
air pollution
8
association air
4
air pollutants
4
pollutants blood
4
blood cell
4
cell counts
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!