Literature DB >> 26024815

Quantifying the health impacts of ambient air pollutants: recommendations of a WHO/Europe project.

Marie-Eve Héroux1, H Ross Anderson, Richard Atkinson, Bert Brunekreef, Aaron Cohen, Francesco Forastiere, Fintan Hurley, Klea Katsouyanni, Daniel Krewski, Michal Krzyzanowski, Nino Künzli, Inga Mills, Xavier Querol, Bart Ostro, Heather Walton.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Quantitative estimates of air pollution health impacts have become an increasingly critical input to policy decisions. The WHO project "Health risks of air pollution in Europe--HRAPIE" was implemented to provide the evidence-based concentration-response functions for quantifying air pollution health impacts to support the 2013 revision of the air quality policy for the European Union (EU).
METHODS: A group of experts convened by WHO Regional Office for Europe reviewed the accumulated primary research evidence together with some commissioned reviews and recommended concentration-response functions for air pollutant-health outcome pairs for which there was sufficient evidence for a causal association.
RESULTS: The concentration-response functions link several indicators of mortality and morbidity with short- and long-term exposure to particulate matter, ozone and nitrogen dioxide. The project also provides guidance on the use of these functions and associated baseline health information in the cost-benefit analysis.
CONCLUSIONS: The project results provide the scientific basis for formulating policy actions to improve air quality and thereby reduce the burden of disease associated with air pollution in Europe.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26024815      PMCID: PMC4480843          DOI: 10.1007/s00038-015-0690-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Public Health        ISSN: 1661-8556            Impact factor:   3.380


Introduction

In 2013, WHO Regional Office for Europe coordinated two international projects: “Review of evidence on health aspects of air pollution—REVIHAAP” and “Health risks of air pollution in Europe—HRAPIE” in order to provide the European Commission (EC) and its stakeholders with evidence-based advice on the health aspects of air pollution for the review of the EU air quality policies. This advice was grounded in a review of the latest scientific evidence on the health effects of air pollutants and involved a large group of invited experts. The projects addressed a list of 26 key policy-relevant questions posed by the EC (WHO Regional office for Europe 2013a, b) and covering specific topics concerning health aspects of individual air pollutants and general aspects important to air quality management. Results of the REVIHAAP project provided an essential input to the HRAPIE project for which the task was to answer the following question: “What concentration–response functions for key pollutants should be included in cost–benefit analysis supporting the revision of EU air quality policy?” Methods of air pollution health risk assessment have been well established in Europe since the first European project (Künzli et al. 2000) and adopted in many global projects including the first global burden of disease (GBD) study (Cohen et al. 2005; Lopez 2013) and the 2010 GBD update (Burnett et al. 2014; Lim et al. 2012). Concentration–response functions (CRFs) are necessary elements for the quantification of health impacts due to air pollution and require regular evaluation and update to incorporate new developments in science. In the specific case of the HRAPIE project, the CRFs were recommended for the quantification of impacts resulting from policies designed to reduce pollution concentrations. The recommended CRFs were subsequently used to identify the pollution reduction strategies that will most effectively deliver a benefit to health as part of the cost-effectiveness analysis (IIASA 2013). The impacts were monetized and then compared with the costs of interventions to form a cost–benefit analysis that enabled evidence-based policy making (Holland 2014). The HRAPIE project recommended the CRFs linking particulate matter (PM), ozone (O3) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concentrations with specific health effects and provided rationale for the decisions. In addition, the project indicated the background health data required for the quantification of effects. As well, the project recommended approaches to integrate specific health outcomes into the estimation of the total health burden of the exposure. The full results of the HRAPIE project are available in the project report (WHO Regional Office for Europe 2013b). The present paper provides a summary of the HRAPIE recommendations and a discussion on their implementation in the EC air policy package, which proposes a package of measures to reduce air pollution with a view of reducing impacts on human health and the environment in the EU.

Methods

Development process for HRAPIE project recommendations

We agreed to apply the established methods of air pollution health impact assessment as used and adapted in previous projects (Burnett et al. 2014; Cohen et al. 2005; Künzli et al. 2000; Lim et al. 2012). The focus of the methods was on the recommendation of CRFs. The discussions at WHO expert meetings provided general direction for the work on CRFs linking particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than 2.5 µm (PM2.5) and O3 with mortality in cost-effectiveness analysis, as well as for the other outcomes to be considered for PM, O3 and NO2 in the cost–benefit analysis. Invited external reviewers selected to represent a range of countries and relevant disciplines also provided detailed comments on a draft version of the project report. The experts used the discussions from meetings and external reviewers’ comments to finalize the project conclusions. Where available, recent systematic reviews or meta-analyses of epidemiological studies were used as input to the HRAPIE project (Hoek et al. 2012, 2013; Katsouyanni et al. 2009; Samoli et al. 2006; Weinmayr et al. 2010; WHO Regional Office for Europe 2013a). In some other cases, a dedicated meta-analysis was performed within the scope of the HRAPIE project, based on information collated by the Air Pollution Epidemiology Database (APED) at St. George’s, University of London (Anderson et al. 2007). This database contains details and results from all time-series studies of mortality and hospital admissions indexed in Medline, Embase, and Web of Knowledge until May 2011. Formal systematic reviews of the evidence were not available or feasible for all issues considered by HRAPIE, due to the limited resources of the project. Therefore, a few of the recommendations were formulated without a formal systematic review (such as for the effects of long-term PM10 exposure on postneonatal mortality and on incidence of chronic bronchitis in adults).

Implementation of the HRAPIE project recommendations

The HRAPIE project provided recommendations for CRFs for which there is sufficient evidence for causality of associations according to the prior REVIHAAP project conclusions. It focussed on those air pollutants observed at concentrations causing health concerns, and which could be estimated at an appropriate spatial scale across Europe for the modelling of impacts. Each of the pollutant–outcome pairs recommended for cost–benefit analysis was classified into two categories: Group A: pollutant–outcome pairs for which enough data are available to enable quantification of effects; Group B: pollutant–outcome pairs for which there is more uncertainty about the data used for quantification of effects. More information on the classification scheme is provided in the Online Resource. The recommendations considered specific conditions in EU countries—particularly in relation to the range of PM, O3 and NO2 concentrations expected to be observed in the EU in 2020—as well as the availability of baseline health data. Therefore, for the analysis in EU, no extrapolation beyond the range covered by epidemiological studies on the effects of ambient PM, O3 or NO2 was needed. However, generalization of the recommended approaches to other regions of the globe or individual countries, or to particular mixtures at the local level, may not be appropriate. Meta-analyses were generally used to derive the coefficients. The random-effects model used in many meta-analyses makes no prior assumption of the homogeneity in distribution around the mean coefficient. The CIs associated with the recommended CRFs quantified the random error and the variability attributed to heterogeneity in the epidemiologic effect estimates used for health impact assessment; this is only a part of the total uncertainty in the risk estimates produced by the health impact assessment and cost–benefit analysis processes. Additional uncertainties were associated with other aspects of the overall process—for example, in the measurement and modelling of pollution, the estimates of background rates for morbidity or mortality and monetary valuation (WHO Regional Office for Europe 2013b; Holland 2014). Some less tangible issues arose from: (1) the transferability to the EU as a whole of CRFs and background rates from the locations where studies were carried out; (2) agreeing what particular pollutant–outcome pairs should be used together to estimate the health impacts of particular policies and measures; and (3) assessing the uncertainty of an overall estimate of effects, aggregated (after conversion to monetary values) over the various pollutant–outcome pairs. An effort was made to give the best evidence-based estimate of the relationship between the pollutant and that health outcome for each pollutant–outcome pair included. However, some assumptions made by the experts might lead to underestimation of the effects. For example, acute effects of air pollution can occur with a delay (lag) of a few days to weeks but in selecting risk coefficients linking short-term exposures to health outcomes; however, the distributed lags were not taken into account, possibly resulting in underestimation of the overall effect. In addition, some health outcomes, such as low birth weight or lung function, for which there is evidence of air pollution effects were excluded because of difficulties in attaching monetary values. Further, the use of the limited set of CRFs proposed in Group A rather than the full set of CRFs may lead to underestimation of effect, as there is sufficient evidence of a causal relationship for pollutant–outcome pairs in both groups.

Possible double counting of effects of various pollutants

Some of the effects of a pollutant on one health outcome may be captured in an estimate of effect on another health outcome or their group (e.g. mortality due to a specific cause is a part of all-cause mortality). To minimize double counting in the calculation of the total costs and benefits for a pollutant, we proposed a set of rules. We identified with an asterisk (*) those effect estimates that contributed to the total cost and benefits (and assumed that their effects are additive) in either the limited set (Group A*) or the extended set (Group B*) of effects. Those without the asterisk were considered to reflect the effects already accounted for by summing those with the asterisk. Quantification of the health impacts of air pollution in the HRAPIE project focuses on three pollutants: PM (PM2.5, PM10) O3 and NO2. In the ambient air, those pollutants are usually correlated to some extent—sometimes negatively so, as with O3 and PM10 in winter (Katsouyanni et al. 2009). The REVIHAAP project therefore proposed quantification of health effects associated with these pollutants only after adjustment for at least one of the others (WHO Regional Office for Europe 2013a). Far fewer studies systematically applying two- or multi-pollutant modelling are available, however, than studies using single-pollutant models. Furthermore, effect estimates for a given pollutant derived from a multi-pollutant model may be subject to bias if the pollutants are correlated with each other and subject to measurement error (Fung and Krewski 1999). This can lead to underestimation of the RR for a pollutant of interest. In balancing these considerations, the HRAPIE project generally opted for effect estimates based on the largest possible group of studies—i.e. reporting single-pollutant analyses—for quantification. Quantification of the impact for one pollutant from single-pollutant models may therefore include effects attributable to another with which it is correlated. Consequently, for any particular health outcome and exposure period (long-term or short-term exposure), estimated impacts of the three individual pollutants should not be added without recognizing that this will, in most practical circumstances, lead to some overestimation of the true impact. Impacts estimated for one pollutant only will, on the other hand, underestimate the true impact of the pollution mixture, if other pollutants affect that same health outcome independently.

Results

The HRAPIE experts recommended CRFs linking long and short-term exposure to PM, O3 and NO2 with several indicators of mortality and morbidity (Table 1). Essential information concerning the CRFs, their sources and background health data necessary for estimation of health effects are provided in Table S1 in the Online Resource. Rationale for the selection of the CRFs and discussion of their uncertainties are presented in the full report of the HRAPIE project (WHO Regional Office for Europe 2013b).
Table 1

Pollutant–health outcome pairs for which HRAPIE project recommends concentration–response functions (modified from WHO 2013b)

Pollutant metricHealth outcomeGroupRR (95 % CI) per 10 µg/m3
PM2.5, annual meanMortality, all-cause (natural), age 30+ yearsA*1.062 (1.040–1.083)
PM2.5, annual meanMortality, cerebrovascular disease (includes stroke), ischaemic heart disease, COPD and trachea, bronchus and lung cancer, age 30+ yearsAGBD 2010 study (IHME 2013)a
PM10, annual meanPostneonatal (age 1–12 months) infant mortality, all-causeB*1.04 (1.02, 1.07)
PM10, annual meanPrevalence of bronchitis in children, age 6–12 (or 6–18) yearsB*1.08 (0.98–1.19)
PM10, annual meanIncidence of chronic bronchitis in adults (age 18+ years)B*1.117 (1.040–1.189)
PM2.5, daily meanMortality, all-cause, all agesA1.0123 (1.0045–1.0201)
PM2.5, daily meanHospital admissions, CVDs (including stroke), all agesA*1.0091 (1.0017–1.0166)
PM2.5, daily meanHospital admissions, respiratory diseases, all agesA*1.0190 (0.9982–1.0402)
PM2.5, 2-week average, converted to PM2.5, annual averageRADs, all agesB**1.047 (1.042–1.053)
PM2.5, 2-week average, converted to PM2.5, annual averageWork days lost, working-age population (age 20–65 years)B*1.046 (1.039–1.053)
PM10, daily meanIncidence of asthma symptoms in asthmatic children aged 5–19 yearsB*1.028 (1.006–1.051)
O3, summer months (April–September), average of daily maximum 8-h mean over 35 ppbMortality, respiratory diseases, age 30+ yearsB1.014 (1.005–1.024)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 35 ppbMortality, all (natural) causes, all agesA*1.0029 (1.0014–1.0043)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 10 ppbMortality, all (natural) causes, all agesA1.0029 (1.0014–1.0043)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 35 ppbMortality, CVDs and respiratory diseases, all agesACVD: 1.0049 (1.0013–1.0085); respiratory: 1.0029 (0.9989–1.0070)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 10 ppbMortality, CVDs and respiratory diseases, all agesACVD: 1.0049 (1.0013–1.0085); respiratory: 1.0029 (0.9989–1.0070)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 35 ppbHospital admissions, CVDs (excluding stroke) and respiratory diseases, age 65+ yearsA*CVD: 1.0089 (1.0050–1.0127); respiratory: 1.0044 (1.0007–1.0083)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 10 ppbHospital admissions, CVDs (excluding stroke) and respiratory diseases, age 65+ yearsACVD: 1.0089 (1.0050–1.0127); respiratory: 1.0044 (1.0007–1.0083)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 35 ppbMRADs, all agesB*1.0154 (1.0060–1.0249)
O3, daily maximum 8-h mean over 10 ppbMRADs, all agesB1.0154 (1.0060–1.0249)
NO2, annual mean over 20 µg/m3 Mortality, all (natural) causes, age 30+ yearsB*1.055 (1.031–1.080)
NO2, annual meanPrevalence of bronchitic symptoms in asthmatic children aged 5–14 yearsB*1.021 (0.990–1.060) per 1 µg/m3 change in annual mean NO2
NO2, daily maximum 1-h meanMortality, all (natural) causes, all agesA*1.0027 (1.0016–1.0038)
NO2, daily maximum 1-h meanHospital admissions, respiratory diseases, all agesA1.0015 (0.9992–1.0038)
NO2, 24-h meanHospital admissions, respiratory diseases, all agesA*1.0180 (1.0115–1.0245)

CI confidence interval, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, CVD cardiovascular disease, GBD global burden of disease, HRAPIE health risks of air pollution in Europe, MRAD minor restricted activity days, NO nitrogen dioxide, O ozone, PM particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than 2.5 µm, PM particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than 10 µm, ppb parts per billion, RAD restricted activity days, RR relative risk

Group A: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the limited set of effects but considered already accounted for by summing those with an asterisk

Group A*: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the total limited set of effects (the effects are additive)

Group B: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the extended set of effects but considered already accounted for by summing those with an asterisk

Group B*: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the total extended set of effects (the effects are additive)

Group B**: Only residual RADs to be added to total effect, after days in hospital, work days lost and days with symptoms are accounted for

aSupra-linear exponential decay saturation model (age-specific), linearized by the PM2.5 expected in 2020 under the current legislation scenario

Pollutant–health outcome pairs for which HRAPIE project recommends concentration–response functions (modified from WHO 2013b) CI confidence interval, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, CVD cardiovascular disease, GBD global burden of disease, HRAPIE health risks of air pollution in Europe, MRAD minor restricted activity days, NO nitrogen dioxide, O ozone, PM particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than 2.5 µm, PM particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than 10 µm, ppb parts per billion, RAD restricted activity days, RR relative risk Group A: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the limited set of effects but considered already accounted for by summing those with an asterisk Group A*: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the total limited set of effects (the effects are additive) Group B: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the extended set of effects but considered already accounted for by summing those with an asterisk Group B*: pollutant–outcome pairs contributing to the total extended set of effects (the effects are additive) Group B**: Only residual RADs to be added to total effect, after days in hospital, work days lost and days with symptoms are accounted for aSupra-linear exponential decay saturation model (age-specific), linearized by the PM2.5 expected in 2020 under the current legislation scenario

Discussion

Since the HRAPIE project report was published, a number of policy-relevant questions have come to our attention, raised by readers of the report. The following paragraphs provide some further perspectives on the HRAPIE recommendations, in response to the issues raised.

Use of thresholds, lower levels, counterfactuals, etc., in quantifying health impacts

The HRAPIE report recommended that quantification of long-term effects of PM2.5 on mortality be undertaken at all concentrations, whereas for NO2, quantification was recommended only above annual mean concentrations >20 µg/m3. This has raised some confusion. We point out that following the recommendation for estimating impacts of PM2.5 down to zero concentrations, higher impacts are estimated than in the GBD 2010 study (Lim et al. 2012). This is because the GBD 2010 study estimated impacts down to a counterfactual concentration below which—because of a lack of data—the risk could not be quantified; this counterfactual for ambient air pollution is different than zero and was chosen as an alternative exposure distribution to which the current exposure distribution is compared (Burnett et al. 2014). The selection of counterfactual levels for risk factors, including for ambient particulate air pollution, were informed by: (1) a counterfactual population distribution of exposure that is theoretically possible and would result in the lowest population disease burden—the theoretical minimum risk exposure distribution (TMRED), and (2) the availability of convincing evidence supporting a continuous reduction in risk of disease extending from current levels down to the counterfactual TMRED (Murray et al. 2012). On this basis, the TMRED for ambient PM2.5 was defined by a uniform distribution with lower and upper bounds at the minimum and 5th percentile of the PM2.5 exposure distribution of the American Cancer Society (ACS) Cancer Prevention II cohort study of 5.8 and 8.8 µg/m3, respectively (Krewski et al. 2009; Lim et al. 2012; Burnett et al. 2014). This approach assumed that long-term exposure to PM2.5 less than 5.8 µg/m3 confers no excess risk, and that although excess risk may extend below the 5th percentile of the distribution, estimates in that range are statistically unstable and therefore highly uncertain. Uncertainty from the counterfactual, the prevalence of exposure, and the exposure–response function was all propagated into the final risk factor uncertainty, and the final uncertainty reflected that of the estimated age- and sex-specific mortality rates as well. For future work under GBD 2013 the same approach is used but includes information from 9 cohort studies with minimum exposure concentrations less than or equal to the 5th percentile in the ACS, i.e. 8.8 µg/m3. Whenever impacts of policy measures are estimated using the HRAPIE CRFs, results will not differ greatly from those obtained using the GBD approach, as for the medium to long term, concentrations in most, if not all, areas in Europe will not likely go below 5.8 µg/m3. We also point out that under the HRAPIE project, due to wider availability of risk estimates and greater precision of background national data for all-cause mortality in Europe, natural all-cause mortality was chosen as the outcome for quantification. This is different to what was chosen as outcome as part of the GBD project, where cause-specific mortality was used because patterns of causes of death vary considerably globally. The lower limit of 20 µg/m3 (annual) for NO2 was motivated by reference to the Naess et al. (2007) Norwegian study, and by unpublished analyses of the data presented in the Cesaroni et al. (2013) paper from Rome. These studies assessed NO2 effects in single-pollutant models. The Naess et al. (2007) paper shows a generally linear relationship between NO2 and mortality, among 71–90 year olds, in the 20–60 µg/m3 range. Figure 1 in that paper actually shows a steeper CRF in the 0–20 µg/m3 range, with wider confidence intervals due to the smaller numbers of participants at such low exposures. The Cesaroni et al. (2013) paper continued to show a linear decline below 20 µg/m3, although again with wider confidence intervals. The evidence presented does not suggest that the effect is zero at 20 µg/m3, just that the size of the effect is less certain below 20 µg/m3. We also note that a recent cohort study conducted among ca. 52,000 adults in Copenhagen, Denmark (Raaschou-Nielsen et al. 2012) has shown a significant, almost linear concentration–response relationship between long-term NO2 concentration (chosen by the authors as an indicator of urban air pollution dominated by traffic exhaust) and mortality [for cardiovascular disease (CVD), ischemic heart disease and all causes] throughout the observed range of NO2 concentrations, which in the large majority of subjects was below 20 µg/m3 (minimum 10.5 µg/m3, median 15.1 µg/m3, maximum 59.6 µg/m3). This study was included in the Hoek et al. (2013) meta-analysis, but we did not explicitly consider it when discussing lower limits of quantification in the HRAPIE project. All-cause mortality increased by 8 % per 10 µg/m3 NO2 long-term exposure at the residence address in the study by Raaschou-Nielsen et al. (2012), so slightly more than estimated in the Hoek et al. meta-analysis. Therefore, the HRAPIE recommendation to calculate the impacts of long-term NO2 exposure on mortality for levels over 20 µg/m3, ignoring potential impacts at lower concentrations, may be too conservative.

Age dependency of CRFs

The HRAPIE report briefly discussed reasons why RRs for factors such as smoking and CVD decline with age, and how that might impact calculations. Air pollution studies have not generally investigated age dependency of RRs in any detail, but there is some specific information to suggest that this is also true for relationships between air pollution and all-cause and cause-specific mortality. Over a 10-year follow-up period, an analysis of the ACS-1 study (Enstrom 2005) showed a RR for PM2.5 and all-cause mortality twice as high among subjects aged 43–64 years at baseline than in subjects aged 65–99 years at baseline (Table 6 of the paper). The study by Naess et al. (2007) showed, for both men and women, a clearly higher RR of CVD as well as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) mortality in subjects aged 51–70 years at baseline than in subjects aged 71–90 years at baseline (Tables 3 and 4 of the paper). In the Harvard Six Cities Study, as reanalysed by Krewski et al. (2000), the RR for all-cause mortality in relation to an 18.6 µg/m3 increase in PM2.5 was 2.11 (0.88–5.07) for those <40 years old at baseline, 1.66 (1.17–2.35) for those 41–55 years old, and 1.17 (0.98–1.40) for those >55 years old at baseline. The same reanalysis showed that, in the ACS study, for those with high school education or less, the RR for all-cause mortality in relation to a 24.5 µg/m3 increase in PM2.5 was 1.51 (1.00–2.27) for those <50 years old at baseline, 1.27 (1.02–1.60) for those 50–60 years old, and 1.28 (1.14–1.43) for those >60 years old at baseline. Early work had already shown that impacts on life expectancy may be over-estimated when RRs observed at certain specific ages in cohort studies are applied to subjects at higher ages with high baseline mortality (Brunekreef, 1997). Most current risk assessments assume that the excess relative risk among adults does not vary with age, but the GBD 2010 estimates incorporated age-dependency of the air pollution relative risk(s) such that the age-specific excess relative risk for cardiovascular mortality declined with increasing age leading to lower estimates of attributable burden (Lim et al. 2012; Burnett et al. 2014).

Cessation lag between reduced long-term exposure to PM2.5 and mortality

The distribution of the cessation lag is relevant both for the size of the effect over a defined time period and when calculating the economic value of the effect due to discounting the value over time. The HRAPIE report stated that findings from the follow-up of the Harvard Six Cities study suggest that mortality effects may be partially reversible, over a time period possibly as short as a year. Ideally, for health impact calculations, a range of possible delays between reduced exposure and a reduced impact on mortality would be used. The HRAPIE report noted that long-term exposure to PM2.5 is linked with lung cancer mortality. Delays for this are likely to be measured in decades, although lung cancer mortality is a small proportion of the total. Other organizations such as the United States Environment Protection Agency (US EPA) have recommended a distribution of different lags (US EPA 2011). Readers are referred to this and other documents (Hurley et al. 2005; COMEAP 2010) for a more detailed discussion.

Application of HRAPIE recommendations and implications for European Union air policy

An impact assessment accompanying the EU policy package was developed by the EC and provides the results of the implementation of the HRAPIE recommendations in a cost–benefit context (EC 2013). According to the EC’s impact assessment, over 406,000 premature deaths were estimated to be related to long-term PM2.5 and short-term O3 exposure in year 2010. New evidence on impacts from chronic O3 exposure is not included but would add around 5 % to this total (EC 2013). The evidence of health impacts from NO2 exposure was considered, but as there was a lack of agreement regarding the extent to which the exposure data used by the EC properly reflected exposure of the population (Holland 2014), no quantification was made of NO2 health impacts. Further work is needed to characterize the link between estimated NO2 exposure and health outcomes as provided in the recommendations of the HRAPIE report. According to the EC assessment, the mortality associated with PM, the most important pollutant, has been reduced by around 20 % between 2000 and 2010 (EC 2013). Modelled trends in pollutant levels show that under a business-as-usual scenario (baseline projection) the impacts of air pollution will continue to decrease by 2020, where they will amount to an estimated 340,000 premature deaths. The progress in further reducing the health impacts from air pollution is expected to be considerably slower beyond 2020. On average across the EU, baseline projection suggests a decline of the loss of statistical life expectancy attributable to the exposure to PM2.5 from 8.5 months in 2005 to 5.3 months in 2025. Depending on the valuation methodology [Value of Statistical Life (VSL) or Value of a Life-Year (VOLY)], the health-related external costs from air pollution ranged between €330 billion and €940 billion in 2010, and would be reduced in the baseline to €210–730 billion in 2030 (2005 € prices). The corresponding benefits of the proposed air policy package can be monetized, resulting in about €40–140 billion per year in 2030, while the costs of pollution abatement to implement the package are estimated to reach € 3.4 billion per year in 2030. The impact assessment states that the monetized benefits will therefore be about 12–40 times higher than the costs (EC 2013). The policy package does not propose changes to the existing air quality standards in the ambient air quality directive at this stage. The EC acknowledges that the current standards are insufficient for the protection of public health, particularly in reference to the WHO air quality guidelines. The focus will be on a full attainment of current air quality standards by 2020. The new policy proposes stricter national emission ceilings and new source legislations which, according to the EC, are expected to pave the way for tightened standards in the ambient air quality directive at a later stage. A 5-year policy review cycle is being considered with a first review taking place no later than 2020, at which time the scope for tightening the air quality standards will be considered by the EC (EC 2013).

Conclusion

The scientific evidence is rapidly expanding, reaffirming and strengthening previously reported associations as well as revealing new health outcomes. Special efforts are required from the scientific community and the policy-makers to engage in a dialogue and enable proper interpretation and synthesis of the scientific evidence for use in policy formulation. The HRAPIE project report, summarized in this paper, illustrates the complexities involved in recommending suitable CRFs, with accompanying recommendations on methods, baseline rates and appropriate strategies for combining results. These complexities need to be acknowledged, and sufficient resources should be made available to enable proper synthesis and interpretation of the evidence in future reviews of air pollution health effects. The REVIHAAP and HRAPIE projects provide scientific arguments for taking decisive actions to improve air quality to further reduce the burden of disease associated with air pollution in Europe. They further recommend that the EC ensures that the evidence on the health effects of air pollutants and the implications for its air quality policy is reviewed regularly. The material developed as part of these projects is equally relevant to all Member States of the EU, in their development and implementation of effective strategies to reduce air pollution and its significant impacts on public health. The two projects described above also provide an important input to the development of air quality policies by the parties of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (LRTAP), which are outside the EU, especially Member States from the eastern part of the WHO European Region. Supplementary material 1 (DOCX 53 kb)
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Journal:  Int J Public Health       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 3.380

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Authors:  Christopher J L Murray; Majid Ezzati; Abraham D Flaxman; Stephen Lim; Rafael Lozano; Catherine Michaud; Mohsen Naghavi; Joshua A Salomon; Kenji Shibuya; Theo Vos; Daniel Wikler; Alan D Lopez
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2012-12-15       Impact factor: 79.321

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Authors:  James E Enstrom
Journal:  Inhal Toxicol       Date:  2005-12-15       Impact factor: 2.724

7.  PM10, and children's respiratory symptoms and lung function in the PATY study.

Authors:  Gerard Hoek; Sam Pattenden; Saskia Willers; Temenuga Antova; Eleonora Fabianova; Charlotte Braun-Fahrländer; Francesco Forastiere; Ulrike Gehring; Heike Luttmann-Gibson; Leticia Grize; Joachim Heinrich; Danny Houthuijs; Nicole Janssen; Boris Katsnelson; Anna Kosheleva; Hanns Moshammer; Manfred Neuberger; Larisa Privalova; Peter Rudnai; Frank Speizer; Hana Slachtova; Hana Tomaskova; Renata Zlotkowska; Tony Fletcher
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2012-04-20       Impact factor: 16.671

8.  A comparative risk assessment of burden of disease and injury attributable to 67 risk factors and risk factor clusters in 21 regions, 1990-2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010.

Authors:  Stephen S Lim; Theo Vos; Abraham D Flaxman; Goodarz Danaei; Kenji Shibuya; Heather Adair-Rohani; Markus Amann; H Ross Anderson; Kathryn G Andrews; Martin Aryee; Charles Atkinson; Loraine J Bacchus; Adil N Bahalim; Kalpana Balakrishnan; John Balmes; Suzanne Barker-Collo; Amanda Baxter; Michelle L Bell; Jed D Blore; Fiona Blyth; Carissa Bonner; Guilherme Borges; Rupert Bourne; Michel Boussinesq; Michael Brauer; Peter Brooks; Nigel G Bruce; Bert Brunekreef; Claire Bryan-Hancock; Chiara Bucello; Rachelle Buchbinder; Fiona Bull; Richard T Burnett; Tim E Byers; Bianca Calabria; Jonathan Carapetis; Emily Carnahan; Zoe Chafe; Fiona Charlson; Honglei Chen; Jian Shen Chen; Andrew Tai-Ann Cheng; Jennifer Christine Child; Aaron Cohen; K Ellicott Colson; Benjamin C Cowie; Sarah Darby; Susan Darling; Adrian Davis; Louisa Degenhardt; Frank Dentener; Don C Des Jarlais; Karen Devries; Mukesh Dherani; Eric L Ding; E Ray Dorsey; Tim Driscoll; Karen Edmond; Suad Eltahir Ali; Rebecca E Engell; Patricia J Erwin; Saman Fahimi; Gail Falder; Farshad Farzadfar; Alize Ferrari; Mariel M Finucane; Seth Flaxman; Francis Gerry R Fowkes; Greg Freedman; Michael K Freeman; Emmanuela Gakidou; Santu Ghosh; Edward Giovannucci; Gerhard Gmel; Kathryn Graham; Rebecca Grainger; Bridget Grant; David Gunnell; Hialy R Gutierrez; Wayne Hall; Hans W Hoek; Anthony Hogan; H Dean Hosgood; Damian Hoy; Howard Hu; Bryan J Hubbell; Sally J Hutchings; Sydney E Ibeanusi; Gemma L Jacklyn; Rashmi Jasrasaria; Jost B Jonas; Haidong Kan; John A Kanis; Nicholas Kassebaum; Norito Kawakami; Young-Ho Khang; Shahab Khatibzadeh; Jon-Paul Khoo; Cindy Kok; Francine Laden; Ratilal Lalloo; Qing Lan; Tim Lathlean; Janet L Leasher; James Leigh; Yang Li; John Kent Lin; Steven E Lipshultz; Stephanie London; Rafael Lozano; Yuan Lu; Joelle Mak; Reza Malekzadeh; Leslie Mallinger; Wagner Marcenes; Lyn March; Robin Marks; Randall Martin; Paul McGale; John McGrath; Sumi Mehta; George A Mensah; Tony R Merriman; Renata Micha; Catherine Michaud; Vinod Mishra; Khayriyyah Mohd Hanafiah; Ali A Mokdad; Lidia Morawska; Dariush Mozaffarian; Tasha Murphy; Mohsen Naghavi; Bruce Neal; Paul K Nelson; Joan Miquel Nolla; Rosana Norman; Casey Olives; Saad B Omer; Jessica Orchard; Richard Osborne; Bart Ostro; Andrew Page; Kiran D Pandey; Charles D H Parry; Erin Passmore; Jayadeep Patra; Neil Pearce; Pamela M Pelizzari; Max Petzold; Michael R Phillips; Dan Pope; C Arden Pope; John Powles; Mayuree Rao; Homie Razavi; Eva A Rehfuess; Jürgen T Rehm; Beate Ritz; Frederick P Rivara; Thomas Roberts; Carolyn Robinson; Jose A Rodriguez-Portales; Isabelle Romieu; Robin Room; Lisa C Rosenfeld; Ananya Roy; Lesley Rushton; Joshua A Salomon; Uchechukwu Sampson; Lidia Sanchez-Riera; Ella Sanman; Amir Sapkota; Soraya Seedat; Peilin Shi; Kevin Shield; Rupak Shivakoti; Gitanjali M Singh; David A Sleet; Emma Smith; Kirk R Smith; Nicolas J C Stapelberg; Kyle Steenland; Heidi Stöckl; Lars Jacob Stovner; Kurt Straif; Lahn Straney; George D Thurston; Jimmy H Tran; Rita Van Dingenen; Aaron van Donkelaar; J Lennert Veerman; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Robert Weintraub; Myrna M Weissman; Richard A White; Harvey Whiteford; Steven T Wiersma; James D Wilkinson; Hywel C Williams; Warwick Williams; Nicholas Wilson; Anthony D Woolf; Paul Yip; Jan M Zielinski; Alan D Lopez; Christopher J L Murray; Majid Ezzati; Mohammad A AlMazroa; Ziad A Memish
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2012-12-15       Impact factor: 79.321

9.  Long-term exposure to urban air pollution and mortality in a cohort of more than a million adults in Rome.

Authors:  Giulia Cesaroni; Chiara Badaloni; Claudio Gariazzo; Massimo Stafoggia; Roberto Sozzi; Marina Davoli; Francesco Forastiere
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2013-01-08       Impact factor: 9.031

10.  An integrated risk function for estimating the global burden of disease attributable to ambient fine particulate matter exposure.

Authors:  Richard T Burnett; C Arden Pope; Majid Ezzati; Casey Olives; Stephen S Lim; Sumi Mehta; Hwashin H Shin; Gitanjali Singh; Bryan Hubbell; Michael Brauer; H Ross Anderson; Kirk R Smith; John R Balmes; Nigel G Bruce; Haidong Kan; Francine Laden; Annette Prüss-Ustün; Michelle C Turner; Susan M Gapstur; W Ryan Diver; Aaron Cohen
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2014-02-11       Impact factor: 9.031

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  51 in total

1.  Global standards for global health in a globalized economy!

Authors:  Nino Künzli; Meltem Kutlar Joss; Emily Gintowt
Journal:  Int J Public Health       Date:  2015-08-21       Impact factor: 3.380

2.  The hidden economic burden of air pollution-related morbidity: evidence from the Aphekom project.

Authors:  Olivier Chanel; Laura Perez; Nino Künzli; Sylvia Medina
Journal:  Eur J Health Econ       Date:  2015-12-09

3.  Integrative health risk assessment of air pollution in the northwest of Spain.

Authors:  Xela García-Santiago; Nuria Gallego-Fernández; Soledad Muniategui-Lorenzo; María Piñeiro-Iglesias; Purificación López-Mahía; Amaya Franco-Uría
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2016-11-19       Impact factor: 4.223

4.  Who is legally responsible for deaths caused by air pollution?

Authors:  Ana Santurtún; Alejandro Villar; María T Zarrabeitia
Journal:  Int J Biometeorol       Date:  2018-09-21       Impact factor: 3.787

5.  Quantifying the health impacts of ambient air pollutants: methodological errors must be avoided.

Authors:  Peter Morfeld; Thomas C Erren
Journal:  Int J Public Health       Date:  2016-04-26       Impact factor: 3.380

6.  Effect of O3, PM10 and PM2.5 on cardiovascular and respiratory diseases in cities of France, Iran and Italy.

Authors:  Pierre Sicard; Yusef Omidi Khaniabadi; Sandra Perez; Maurizio Gualtieri; Alessandra De Marco
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2019-09-12       Impact factor: 4.223

7.  A replicable strategy for mapping air pollution's community-level health impacts and catalyzing prevention.

Authors:  Philip J Landrigan; Samantha Fisher; Maureen E Kenny; Brittney Gedeon; Luke Bryan; Jenna Mu; David Bellinger
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2022-07-18       Impact factor: 7.123

8.  Estimating risk factor attributable burden - challenges and potential solutions when using the comparative risk assessment methodology.

Authors:  Dietrich Plass; Henk Hilderink; Heli Lehtomäki; Simon Øverland; Terje A Eikemo; Taavi Lai; Vanessa Gorasso; Brecht Devleesschauwer
Journal:  Arch Public Health       Date:  2022-05-27

9.  Tropospheric ozone assessment report: Global ozone metrics for climate change, human health, and crop/ecosystem research.

Authors:  Allen S Lefohn; Christopher S Malley; Luther Smith; Benjamin Wells; Milan Hazucha; Heather Simon; Vaishali Naik; Gina Mills; Martin G Schultz; Elena Paoletti; Alessandra De Marco; Xiaobin Xu; Li Zhang; Tao Wang; Howard S Neufeld; Robert C Musselman; David Tarasick; Michael Brauer; Zhaozhong Feng; Haoye Tang; Kazuhiko Kobayashi; Pierre Sicard; Sverre Solberg; Giacomo Gerosa
Journal:  Elementa (Wash D C)       Date:  2018       Impact factor: 6.053

10.  Ambient Particulate Air Pollution and Daily Mortality in 652 Cities.

Authors:  Cong Liu; Renjie Chen; Francesco Sera; Ana M Vicedo-Cabrera; Yuming Guo; Shilu Tong; Micheline S Z S Coelho; Paulo H N Saldiva; Eric Lavigne; Patricia Matus; Nicolas Valdes Ortega; Samuel Osorio Garcia; Mathilde Pascal; Massimo Stafoggia; Matteo Scortichini; Masahiro Hashizume; Yasushi Honda; Magali Hurtado-Díaz; Julio Cruz; Baltazar Nunes; João P Teixeira; Ho Kim; Aurelio Tobias; Carmen Íñiguez; Bertil Forsberg; Christofer Åström; Martina S Ragettli; Yue-Leon Guo; Bing-Yu Chen; Michelle L Bell; Caradee Y Wright; Noah Scovronick; Rebecca M Garland; Ai Milojevic; Jan Kyselý; Aleš Urban; Hans Orru; Ene Indermitte; Jouni J K Jaakkola; Niilo R I Ryti; Klea Katsouyanni; Antonis Analitis; Antonella Zanobetti; Joel Schwartz; Jianmin Chen; Tangchun Wu; Aaron Cohen; Antonio Gasparrini; Haidong Kan
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2019-08-22       Impact factor: 91.245

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