Literature DB >> 20073322

Air pollution and health: a European and North American approach (APHENA).

Klea Katsouyanni1, Jonathan M Samet, H Ross Anderson, Richard Atkinson, Alain Le Tertre, Sylvia Medina, Evangelia Samoli, Giota Touloumi, Richard T Burnett, Daniel Krewski, Timothy Ramsay, Francesca Dominici, Roger D Peng, Joel Schwartz, Antonella Zanobetti.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: This report provides the methodology and findings from the project: Air Pollution and Health: a European and North American Approach (APHENA). The principal purpose of the project was to provide an understanding of the degree of consistency among findings of multicity time-series studies on the effects of air pollution on mortality and hospitalization in several North American and European cities. The project included parallel and combined analyses of existing data. The investigators sought to understand how methodological differences might contribute to variation in effect estimates from different studies, to characterize the extent of heterogeneity in effect estimates, and to evaluate determinants of heterogeneity. The APHENA project was based on data collected by three groups of investigators for three earlier studies: (1) Air Pollution and Health: A European Approach (APHEA), which comprised two multicity projects in Europe. (Phase 1 [APHEA1] involving 15 cities, and Phase 2 [APHEA2] involving 32 cities); (2) the National Morbidity, Mortality, and Air Pollution Study (NMMAPS), conducted in the 90 largest U.S. cities; and (3) multicity research on the health effects of air pollution in 12 Canadian cities.
METHODS: The project involved the initial development of analytic approaches for first-stage and second-stage analyses of the time-series data and the subsequent application of the resulting methods to the time-series data. With regard to the first-stage analysis, the various investigative groups had used conceptually similar approaches to the key issues of controlling for temporal confounding and temperature; however, specific methods differed. Consequently, the investigators needed to establish a standard protocol, but one that would be linked to prior approaches. Based on exploratory analyses and simulation studies, a first-stage analysis protocol was developed that used generalized linear models (GLM) with either penalized splines (PS) or natural splines (NS) to adjust for seasonality, with 3, 8, or 12 degrees of freedom (df) per year and also the number of degrees of freedom chosen by minimizing the partial autocorrelation function (PACF) of the model's residuals. For hospitalization data, the approach for model specification followed that used for mortality, accounting for seasonal patterns, but also, for weekend and vacation effects, and for epidemics of respiratory disease. The data were also analyzed to detect potential thresholds in the concentration-response relationships. The second-stage analysis used pooling approaches and assessed potential effect modification by sociodemographic characteristics and indicators of the pollution mixture across study regions. Specific quality control exercises were also undertaken. Risks were estimated for two pollutants: particulate matter - 10 pm in aerodynamic diameter (PM10) and ozone (O3).
RESULTS: The first-stage analysis yielded estimates that were relatively robust to the underlying smoothing approach and to the number of degrees of freedom. The first-stage APHENA results generally replicated the previous independent analyses performed by the three groups of investigators. PM10 effects on mortality risk estimates from the APHEA2 and NMMAPS databases were quite close, while estimates from the Canadian studies were substantially higher. For hospitalization, results were more variable without discernable patterns of variation among the three data sets. PM10 effect-modification patterns, explored only for cities with daily pollution data (i.e., 22 in Europe and 15 in the U.S.), were not entirely consistent across centers. Thus, the levels of pollutants modified the effects differently in Europe than in the United States. Climatic variables were important only in Europe. In both Europe and the United States, a higher proportion of older persons in the study population was associated with increased PM10 risk estimates, as was a higher rate of unemployment - the sole indicator of socioeconomic status uniformly available across the data sets. APHENA study results on the effects of O3 on mortality were less comprehensive than for PM10 because the studies from the three regions varied in whether they analyzed data for the full year or only for the summer months. The effects tended to be larger for summer in Europe and the United States. In the United States they were lower when controlled for PM10. The estimated effect of O3 varied by degrees of freedom and across the three geographic regions. The effects of O3 on mortality were larger in Canada, and there was little consistent indication of effect modification in any location.
CONCLUSIONS: APHENA has shown that mortality findings obtained with the new standardized analysis were generally comparable to those obtained in the earlier studies, and that they were relatively robust to the data analysis method used. For PM10, the effect-modification patterns observed were not entirely consistent between Europe and the United States. For O3, there was no indication of strong effect modification in any of the three data sets.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20073322

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Res Rep Health Eff Inst        ISSN: 1041-5505


  67 in total

1.  Time series analysis of personal exposure to ambient air pollution and mortality using an exposure simulator.

Authors:  Howard H Chang; Montserrat Fuentes; H Christopher Frey
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2012-06-06       Impact factor: 5.563

2.  Temperature, Not Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5), is Causally Associated with Short-Term Acute Daily Mortality Rates: Results from One Hundred United States Cities.

Authors:  Tony Cox; Douglas Popken; Paolo F Ricci
Journal:  Dose Response       Date:  2012-12-14       Impact factor: 2.658

3.  Re: "is the relation between ozone and mortality confounded by chemical components of particulate matter? analysis of 7 components in 57 us communities".

Authors:  Sonja Sax; Julie E Goodman
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2013-05-21       Impact factor: 4.897

Review 4.  Current approaches used in epidemiologic studies to examine short-term multipollutant air pollution exposures.

Authors:  Angel D Davalos; Thomas J Luben; Amy H Herring; Jason D Sacks
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2016-12-09       Impact factor: 3.797

5.  Short-term effect of fine particulate matter (PM₂.₅) and ozone on daily mortality in Lisbon, Portugal.

Authors:  Pedro Garrett; Elsa Casimiro
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2011-05-19       Impact factor: 4.223

6.  Seasonal variation in the acute effects of ozone on premature mortality among elderly Japanese.

Authors:  Chris Fook Sheng Ng; Kayo Ueda; Hiroshi Nitta; Ayano Takeuchi
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2013-04-21       Impact factor: 2.513

7.  Fine-scale spatiotemporal air pollution analysis using mobile monitors on Google Street View vehicles.

Authors:  Yawen Guan; Margaret C Johnson; Matthias Katzfuss; Elizabeth Mannshardt; Kyle P Messier; Brian J Reich; Joon Jin Song
Journal:  J Am Stat Assoc       Date:  2019-10-09       Impact factor: 5.033

8.  Cardiovascular and respiratory mortality attributed to ground-level ozone in Ahvaz, Iran.

Authors:  Gholamreza Goudarzi; Sahar Geravandi; Hossein Foruozandeh; Ali Akbar Babaei; Nadali Alavi; Mehdi Vosoughi Niri; Mohammad Javad Khodayar; Shokrollah Salmanzadeh; Mohammad Javad Mohammadi
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2015-07-04       Impact factor: 2.513

Review 9.  A niche for infectious disease in environmental health: rethinking the toxicological paradigm.

Authors:  Beth J Feingold; Leora Vegosen; Meghan Davis; Jessica Leibler; Amy Peterson; Ellen K Silbergeld
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2010-04-12       Impact factor: 9.031

10.  The sensitivity of health effect estimates from time-series studies to fine particulate matter component sampling schedule.

Authors:  Sun-Young Kim; Lianne Sheppard; Michael P Hannigan; Steven J Dutton; Jennifer L Peel; Maggie L Clark; Sverre Vedal
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2013-05-15       Impact factor: 5.563

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