| Literature DB >> 20452882 |
Molini M Patel1, Steven N Chillrud, Juan C Correa, Yair Hazi, Marian Feinberg, Deepti Kc, Swati Prakash, James M Ross, Diane Levy, Patrick L Kinney.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exposure to traffic-related particulate matter (PM) has been associated with adverse respiratory health outcomes in children. Diesel exhaust particles (DEPs) are a local driver of urban fine PM [aerodynamic diameter < or = 2.5 microm (PM(2.5))]; however, evidence linking ambient DEP exposure to acute respiratory symptoms is relatively sparse, and susceptibilities of urban and asthmatic children are inadequately characterized.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20452882 PMCID: PMC2944099 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.0901499
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Characteristics of study population.
| School | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | U1 | U2 | U3 | S1 | S2 |
| Sample size | 33 | 58 | 70 | 46 | 42 |
| Age (years) [median (range)] | 17 (14–18) | 15 (13–18) | 16 (15–20) | 16 (15–20) | 17 (13–19) |
| Sex | |||||
| Male | 37 | 11 | 34 | 33 | 32 |
| Female | 63 | 89 | 66 | 67 | 68 |
| Race/ethnicity | |||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 4 | 0 | 22 | 21 | 15 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 43 | 39 | 19 | 53 | 64 |
| Hispanic | 46 | 55 | 36 | 12 | 10 |
| Other | 7 | 5 | 23 | 14 | 10 |
| Father’s education level | |||||
| Less than high school | 46 | 22 | 19 | 6 | 13 |
| High school graduate | 23 | 49 | 57 | 26 | 42 |
| College graduate | 31 | 30 | 25 | 68 | 45 |
| Smoking prevalence | 10 | 0 | 8 | 7 | 10 |
| Asthmatics [no. (%)] | 5 (16) | 14 (24) | 27 (39) | 3 (7) | 8 (21) |
| School asthma prevalence | 21 | 19 | 19 | 12 | 12 |
| Symptom prevalence | |||||
| Wheeze | 14 (0–23) | 10 (5–19) | 14 (8–23) | 7 (0–14) | 13 (3–21) |
| Cough | 46 (0–61) | 39 (22–61) | 27 (15–39) | 33 (20–46) | 35 (22–44) |
| Shortness of breath | 16 (0–33) | 18 (8–28) | 26 (12–43) | 7 (0–20) | 16 (8–31) |
| Chest tightness | 14 (0–55) | 10 (4–19) | 13 (6–21) | 7 (0–36) | 13 (5–25) |
| Use of medication for asthma | 11 (0–27) | 8 (5–13) | 12 (7–16) | 2 (0–8) | 6 (3–13) |
Data are presented as percentages unless otherwise specified. Eight subjects (1–3 per school) are missing demographic data because of uncompleted baseline questionnaires but are included in the sample sizes for each school.
Among the subjects who returned symptom diaries, the number of subjects who reported current smoking on the baseline questionnaire divided by the number of subjects who completed the baseline questionnaire.
The number of students who reported current asthma on the anonymous survey divided by the number of students who completed the anonymous survey at each school.
On a given day during the study period, the number of subjects reporting presence of a symptom or use of medication divided by all subjects providing data on symptoms or medication use that day.
Distributions of daily average BC and PM2.5 concentrations.
| Concentration (μg/m3) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| School | Location | Monitoring dates | Pollutant | Median | Minimum | Maximum |
| U1 | Medium highway | 4/28/2003–6/8/2003 (BC) | BC | 2.4 | 0.68 | 5.5 |
| 5/15/2003–6/8/2003 (PM2.5) | PM2.5 | 20.3 | 8.3 | 42.8 | ||
| U2 | Large highway | 2/23/2004–3/28/2004 | BC | 2.0 | 0.59 | 4.9 |
| PM2.5 | 18.4 | 8.8 | 43.0 | |||
| U3 | Two-lane street | 4/3/2005–5/8/2005 | BC | 1.5 | 0.33 | 2.3 |
| PM2.5 | 21.6 | 11.5 | 49.0 | |||
| S1 | Two-lane street | 5/5/2003–6/16/2003 | BC | 0.60 | 0.11 | 1.8 |
| PM2.5 | N/A | N/A | N/A | |||
| S2 | Two-lane street | 2/23/2004–3/21/2004 | BC | 0.49 | 0.10 | 2.7 |
| 3/11/2004–3/21/2004 | PM2.5 | 7.8 | 4.5 | 16.5 | ||
For 2 days measures were < LOD.
Spearman correlation coefficients for pollutant pairs.
| School | BC–NO2 | BC–PM2.5 | BC–O3 | NO2–PM2.5 | NO2–O3 | PM2.5–O3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| U1 | 0.86 | 0.67 | −0.15 | 0.74 | 0.04 | 0.31 |
| U2 | 0.76 | 0.47 | −0.24 | 0.57 | −0.61 | −0.38 |
| U3 | 0.56 | 0.53 | −0.24 | 0.34 | −0.12 | 0.08 |
| S1 | 0.90 | N/A | −0.10 | N/A | −0.02 | N/A |
| S2 | 0.75 | 0.68 | −0.53 | 0.85 | −0.54 | −0.13 |
p < 0.05.
ORsa (95% CI) for respiratory symptoms and use of medication for asthma associated with an IQRb increase in pollutant concentrations at various lags of exposure.
| Pollutant | Wheeze | Cough | Shortness of breath | Chest tightness | Use of medication for asthma |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BC (249 subjects, 6,210 person-days) | |||||
| Lag 0 | 1.11 (1.00–1.22) | 0.95 (0.87–1.03) | 1.26 (1.14–1.38) | 1.11 (1.01–1.24) | 1.09 (0.89–1.33) |
| Lag 1 | 1.08 (1.03–1.13) | 0.91 (0.83–0.99) | 1.03 (0.93–1.13) | 0.95 (0.85–1.06) | 0.93 (0.75–1.14) |
| 2-day average | 1.09 (0.96–1.22) | 0.90 (0.81–0.99) | 1.22 (1.08–1.36) | 1.04 (0.92–1.18) | 1.02 (0.79–1.31) |
| 3-day average | 1.10 (1.03–1.18) | 0.91 (0.81–1.02) | 1.13 (0.99–1.29) | 0.95 (0.82–1.10) | 0.91 (0.68–1.22) |
| 4-day average | 1.19 (1.06–1.33) | 0.98 (0.86–1.12) | 1.11 (0.95–1.30) | 0.93 (0.79–1.10) | 0.82 (0.58–1.15) |
| 5-day average | 1.22 (1.08–1.38) | 1.03 (0.88–1.19) | 1.15 (0.96–1.36) | 0.93 (0.77–1.12) | 0.79 (0.54–1.15) |
| NO2 (249 subjects, 6,555 person-days) | |||||
| Lag 0 | 1.03 (0.93–1.14) | 0.96 (0.88–1.05) | 1.20 (1.10–1.32) | 1.08 (0.97–1.20) | 1.07 (0.86–1.34) |
| Lag 1 | 1.09 (0.97–1.24) | 0.88 (0.80–0.98) | 1.15 (1.03–1.29) | 1.06 (0.94–1.21) | 1.01 (0.77–1.32) |
| 2-day average | 1.15 (1.00–1.33) | 0.89 (0.79–1.01) | 1.28 (1.12–1.46) | 1.07 (0.92–1.25) | 1.06 (0.77–1.45) |
| 3-day average | 1.32 (1.11–1.56) | 0.88 (0.77–1.02) | 1.32 (1.12–1.54) | 0.99 (0.83–1.18) | 1.13 (0.77–1.64) |
| 4-day average | 1.57 (1.29–1.91) | 0.96 (0.82–1.13) | 1.31 (1.09–1.57) | 0.91 (0.74–1.11) | 1.14 (0.74–1.76) |
| 5-day average | 1.70 (1.36–2.13) | 1.05 (0.87–1.26) | 1.35 (1.09–1.67) | 0.89 (0.70–1.12) | 1.05 (0.64–1.73) |
| PM2.5 (200 subjects, 4,026 person-days) | |||||
| Lag 0 | 1.05 (0.94–1.16) | 0.86 (0.78–0.94) | 1.02 (0.92–1.13) | 0.87 (0.78–0.98) | 1.06 (0.85–1.33) |
| Lag 1 | 1.09 (0.98–1.21) | 0.83 (0.75–0.91) | 0.86 (0.78–0.96) | 0.80 (0.71–0.90) | 0.87 (0.69–1.09) |
| 2-day average | 1.10 (0.98–1.25) | 0.79 (0.70–0.88) | 0.92 (0.82–1.04) | 0.79 (0.69–0.90) | 0.93 (0.71–1.21) |
| 3-day average | 1.18 (1.03–1.35) | 0.78 (0.70–0.89) | 0.86 (0.75–0.99) | 0.74 (0.64–0.86) | 0.90 (0.67–1.21) |
| 4-day average | 1.24 (1.06–1.44) | 0.78 (0.69–0.90) | 0.80 (0.69–0.93) | 0.70 (0.59–0.82) | 0.86 (0.62–1.19) |
| 5-day average | 1.23 (1.04–1.45) | 0.76 (0.65–0.88) | 0.73 (0.62–0.87) | 0.64 (0.53–0.77) | 0.78 (0.54–1.12) |
Models combine data from all schools and adjust for school, weekend, and daily maximum 8-hr average O3.
IQRs are 1.2 μg/m3 for BC, 16 ppb for NO2, and 11.3 μg/m3 for PM2.5.
Sample sizes vary among pollutant models because of differing patterns of missing pollutant measurements.
p < 0.05.
0.05 ≤ p < 0.10.
ORs (95% CI) for respiratory symptoms and use of medication for asthma associated with an IQRa increase in same-day average pollutant concentrations, stratified by locationb or asthma status.c
| Pollutant and subgroup (sample size) | Wheeze for asthma | Cough | Shortness of breath | Chest tightness | Use of medication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BC | |||||
| BC × urban interaction | |||||
| Urban (161; 3,917) | 1.26 (1.14–1.40) | 1.15 (1.03–1.29) | |||
| Suburban (88; 2,293) | 0.99 (0.74–1.32) | 0.79 (0.57–1.09) | |||
| BC × asthma interaction | |||||
| Asthma (57; 1,350) | 1.23 (1.00–1.50) | 1.22 (1.01–1.49) | |||
| No asthma (192; 4,860) | 1.00 (0.89–1.13) | 0.81 (0.55–1.19) | |||
| NO2 | |||||
| NO2 × urban interaction | |||||
| Urban | (161, 4,259) | 1.27 (1.14–1.42) | |||
| Suburban (88; 2,296) | 0.98 (0.83–1.15) | ||||
| NO2 × asthma interaction | |||||
| Asthma (57; 1,473) | 1.13 (0.94–1.36) | 1.20 (1.00–1.44) | |||
| No asthma (192; 5,082) | 0.90 (0.79–1.02) | 0.97 (0.79–1.19) | |||
IQRs are 1.2 μg/m3 for BC and 16 ppb for NO2.
Adjusted for weekend, daily maximum 8-hr average O3, and asthma.
Adjusted for weekend, daily maximum 8-hr average O3, and urban location.
Sample sizes refer to number of subjects and person-days of observations in each model. Person-days vary among pollutant models because of differing patterns of missing pollutant measurements.
p < 0.05.
0.05 ≤ p < 0.10.