Literature DB >> 15942641

Retrospective assessment of exposure to traffic air pollution using the ExTra index in the VESTA French epidemiological study.

Patrice Reungoat1, Mireille Chiron, Stéphanie Gauvin, Denis Zmirou-Navier, Isabelle Momas.   

Abstract

This study applies a traffic exhaust air dispersion model (the ExTra index) to 403 children enrolled in a French multicentric case-control study, the VESTA study (Five [V] Epidemiological Studies on Transport and Asthma). The ExTra index (previously validated by our team) was used to assess lifelong average traffic-related air pollutant (TAP) concentrations (nitrogen oxides) children in the study were exposed to in front of their living places. ExTra index took into account traffic density, topographical parameters (building height, road and pavement width), weather conditions (wind direction and strength) and background pollution levels. Topographical and traffic data were collected, using a specific questionnaire for each home, school or nursery address, attended by children. The assessment of time-weighted NOx levels in front of the children's living places highlighted significant disparities: mean ExTra index values and share attributable to proximity traffic were, respectively, 70+/-42 and 14+/-22 microg/m3 NOx equivalent NO2 for the 403 children in our study. Not only would this diversity not have been revealed using urban background pollution data provided by air quality networks, it would have resulted in 40% of the children being misclassified with regard to their TAP exposure by underestimating it in half of the cases and overestimating it in the other half. Such errors of classification, which are highly prejudicial in epidemiology, argue strongly for the use of an index such as the ExTra, which enables TAP exposure to be reconstructed within the framework of retrospective or prospective epidemiological studies.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15942641     DOI: 10.1038/sj.jea.7500430

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol        ISSN: 1053-4245


  2 in total

1.  A longitudinal analysis of associations between traffic-related air pollution with asthma, allergies and sensitization in the GINIplus and LISAplus birth cohorts.

Authors:  Elaine Fuertes; Marie Standl; Josef Cyrys; Dietrich Berdel; Andrea von Berg; Carl-Peter Bauer; Ursula Krämer; Dorothea Sugiri; Irina Lehmann; Sibylle Koletzko; Chris Carlsten; Michael Brauer; Joachim Heinrich
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2013-11-07       Impact factor: 2.984

2.  Land use regression modeling of intra-urban residential variability in multiple traffic-related air pollutants.

Authors:  Jane E Clougherty; Rosalind J Wright; Lisa K Baxter; Jonathan I Levy
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2008-05-16       Impact factor: 5.984

  2 in total

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