| Literature DB >> 31665023 |
Anaïs Havet1,2, Zhen Li3, Farid Zerimech4, Margaux Sanchez5, Valérie Siroux6, Nicole Le Moual7,8, Bert Brunekreef9,10, Nino Künzli11,12, Bénédicte Jacquemin7,8, Raphaëlle Varraso7,8, Régis Matran13, Rachel Nadif7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidences that oxidative stress plays a role in the associations between outdoor air pollution and asthma are growing. We aimed to study the role of plasma fluorescent oxidation products levels (FlOPs; an oxidative stress-related biomarker), as potential mediators, in the associations between outdoor air pollution and persistent asthma. <br> METHODS: Analyses were conducted in 204 adult asthmatics followed up in the French case-control and family study on asthma (EGEA; the Epidemiological study of the Genetic and Environmental factors of Asthma). Persistent asthma was defined as having current asthma at EGEA2 (baseline, 2003-2007) and EGEA3 (follow-up, 2011-2013). Exposures to nitrogen dioxide, nitrogen oxides, road traffic, particulate matter with a diameter ≤ 10 μm (PM10) and ≤ 2.5 μm were estimated by ESCAPE models (2009-2010), and ozone (O3) by IFEN models (2004). We used a mediation analysis to assess the mediated effect by FlOPs levels and the interaction between FlOPs levels and air pollution. <br> RESULTS: FlOPs levels increased with PM10 and O3 (adjusted β = 0.04 (95%CI 0.001-0.08), aβ = 0.04 (95%CI 0.009-0.07) per 10 μg/m3, respectively), and the risk of persistent asthma increased with FlOPs levels (aOR = 1.81 (95%CI 1.08-3.02)). The risk of persistent asthma decreased with exposures to NO2, NOx and PM2.5 (aOR ranging from 0.62 to 0.94), and increased with exposures to PM10, O3, O3-summer and road traffic, the greater effect being observed for O3 (aOR = 1.78, 95% CI 0.73-4.37, per 10 μg/m3). Using mediation analysis, we observed a positive total effect (aOR = 2.16, 95%CI 0.70-11.9), a positive direct effect of O3 on persistent asthma (OR = 1.68, 95%CI 0.57-7.25), and a positive indirect effect mediated by FIOPs levels (aOR = 1.28 (95%CI 1.01-2.29)) accounting for 41% of the total effect. <br> CONCLUSIONS: Our results add insights on the role of oxidative stress in the association between air pollution and persistent asthma.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Fluorescent oxidation products; Mediation analysis; Outdoor air pollution; Oxidative stress; Persistent asthma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31665023 PMCID: PMC6819357 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-019-0532-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Fig. 1Direct acyclic graph of the proposed mediation model. FlOPs: fluorescent oxidation products
Description of participants with current asthma at baseline (EGEA2) according to change in current asthma between EGEA2 to EGEA3
| All participants | Participants with remittent asthma | Participants with persistent asthma | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | 204 | 43 | 161 | |
| Age (years), mean ± SD | 39.3 ± 16.9 | 36.7 ± 15.3 | 40.0 ± 17.3 | 0.26 |
| Male, n (%) | 99 (48.5) | 16 (37.2) | 83 (51.6) | 0.09 |
| Smoking status, n (%) | ||||
| Never-smoker | 109 (53.4) | 22 (51.2) | 87 (54.0) | 0.52 |
| Ex-smoker | 46 (22.6) | 8 (18.6) | 38 (23.6) | |
| Current smoker | 49 (24.0) | 13 (30.2) | 36 (22.4) | |
| BMI (kg/m2), mean ± SD | 23.4 ± 3.99 | 0.40 | ||
| 23.8 ± 3.84 | 23.9 ± 3.81 | |||
| Socioprofessional category, n (%) | ||||
| Unemployed | 32 (15.7) | 5 (11.6) | 27 (16.8) | 0.37 |
| Manager | 64 (31.4) | 12 (27.9) | 52 (32.3) | |
| Technician | 88 (43.1) | 19 (44.2) | 69 (42.8) | |
| Manual worker | 20 (9.8) | 7 (16.3) | 13 (8.1) | |
| Asthma onset years, mean ± SD | 0.40 | |||
| 14.8 ± 14.7 | 16.6 ± 14.6 | 14.4 ± 14.7 | ||
| Poor controlled asthmaa, n (%) | 0.007 | |||
| 102 (53.7) | 13 (34.2) | 89 (58.6) | ||
| Use of inhaled corticosteroids, n (%) | 0.009 | |||
| 132 (66.0) | 20 (48.8) | 112 (70.4) | ||
| Symptom score of asthmab, n (%) | N = 159 | |||
| 0 | 20 (10.0) | 9 (22.5) | 11 (6.9) | 0.005 |
| 1–2 | 30 (15.1) | 8 (20.0) | 22 (13.8) | |
| >2 | 149 (74.9) | 23 (57.5) | 126 (79.3) | |
| Plasma FlOPs levels (RFU/mL), GM (q1-q3) | 92.0 (79.5–104.7) | 85.6 (76.0–96.5) | 93.8 (79.9–104.8) | 0.02 |
| Residence time (years), mean ± SD | 11.7 ± 10.2 (0–42) | 10.3 ± 8.90 (0–31) | 12.1 ± 10.5 (0–42) | 0.31 |
| Air pollutant levels and traffic metricsc, mean ± SD | ||||
| NO2 | 27.9 ± 13.9 | 29.7 ± 15.3 | 27.4 ± 13.5 | 0.34 |
| NOX | 49.7 ± 32.7 | 53.2 ± 38.4 | 48.8 ± 31.0 | 0.44 |
| PM10 | 25.0 ± 4.07 | 25.1 ± 3.71 | 24.9 ± 4.18 | 0.88 |
| PM2.5 | 15.0 ± 2.04 | 15.5 ± 1.96 | 14.9 ± 2.05 | 0.20 |
| Traffic load | 1,755,353 ± 4,718,630 | 1,672,062 ± 4,007,561 | 1,777,599 ± 4,902,148 | 0.90 |
| Traffic intensity | 7307 ± 13,109 | 7027 ± 11,360 | 7382 ± 13,569 | 0.87 |
| O3 | 43.9 ± 4.62 | 43.1 ± 4.08 | 44.2 ± 4.74 | 0.15 |
| O3-summer | 65.4 ± 6.20 | 64.7 ± 6.41 | 65.6 ± 6.14 | 0.38 |
SD standard deviation, BMI body mass index, FlOPs fluorescent oxidation products, GM geometric mean; q1-q3: 25th and 75th percentiles of the GM
aDefined according to GINA 2015 guidelines and from participants with partly controlled asthma or uncontrolled asthma (see Additional file 1)
More details in Additional file 1
cPollutant levels in μg/m3, traffic load in vehicles/day x meters, and traffic intensity in vehicles/day
Associations between outdoor air pollution and plasma FlOPs levels
| NO2 | NOx | PM10a | PM2.5a | Total traffic load on major roads in a 100-m buffer of the homeb | Traffic intensity at the road nearest to a participant’s homeb | O3 | O3-sumer | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | n β crude (95% CI) P | 204 0.007 (− 0.004,0.02) 0.19 | 204 0.006 (− 0.003,0.02) 0.15 | 146 0.04 (0.001,0.08) 0.04 | 146 0.03 (− 0.009,0.07) 0.15 | 204 0.008 (− 0.005,0.02) 0.24 | 204 0.0004 (− 0.005,0.006) 0.88 | 204 0.03 (− 0.004,0.06) 0.06 | 204 0.02 (− 0.03,0.07) 0.36 |
| Model 2 | n β adjusted (95% CI) P | 204 0.007 (− 0.003,0.02) 0.18 | 204 0.007 (− 0.002,0.02) 0.16 | 146 0.04 (0.001,0.08) 0.03 | 146 0.03 (− 0.008,0.07) 0.18 | 204 0.006 (− 0.006,0.02) 0.30 | 204 0.0002 (− 0.005,0.006) 0.94 | 204 0.04 (0.009,0.07) 0.02 | 204 0.02 (− 0.02,0.06) 0.45 |
| Model 3 | n β adjusted (95% CI) P | 204 0.007 (− 0.002,0.02) 0.14 | 204 0.006 (− 0.002,0.01) 0.12 | 72 0.03 (− 0.01,0.07) 0.22c | |||||
| Model 4 | n β adjusted (95% CI) P | 186 0.009 (− 0.003,0.02) 0.14 | 186 0.008 (− 0.002,0.02) 0.14 | 133 0.05 (0.006,0.09) 0.04 | 133 0.02 (− 0.02,0.06) 0.24 | 186 0.003 (− 0.01,0.02) 0.63 | 186 0.0005 (− 0.005,0.006) 0.86 | 186 0.05 (0.01,0.08) 0.01 | 186 0.02 (− 0.03,0.07) 0.37 |
The linear regression models were conducted with random effects on familial dependence and center. FlOPs levels were log10-transformed. NO2, nitrogen dioxide; NOx, nitrogen oxides; PM10, particulate matter with a diameter ≤ 10 μm; PM2.5, particulate matter with a diameter ≤ 5 μm. Results are expressed per 20 μg/m3 increase of NOx exposure, per 10 μg/m3 increase of NO2, PM10 O3 and O3-summer exposures, per 5 μg/m3 increase of PM2.5 exposure, per 4 million vehicles x meters per day increase of total traffic load, per 5000 vehicles per day increase of traffic intensity. Model 1: unadjusted. Model 2: adjusted for age, sex and smoking status. Model 3: with back-extrapolated pollution and adjusted for age, sex and smoking status. Model 4: after excluding the participants living at the same residential address <1 year
aNot back-extrapolated PM were only estimated in Paris and in Grenoble, and back extrapolated PM10 only in Paris
bEstimates were also adjusted for background NO2
cThe linear regression model was only conducted with random effects on familial dependence because back-extrapolated PM10 were estimated only in Paris
Results of mediation analysis between O3, persistent asthma and plasma FlOPs levels using the CAUSALMED procedure (n = 204)
| OR | Estimate | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Odds Ratio Total Effect | 2.16 | 0.70–11.9 |
| Odds Ratio Natural Direct Effect | 1.68 | 0.57–7.25 |
| Odds Ratio Natural Indirect Effect | 1.28 | 1.01–2.29 |
| Decomposition of the total effect | ||
| Four-way | Percent | |
| Controlled direct | 50.3 | |
| Reference interaction | 8.6 | |
| Mediated interaction | 26.5 | |
| Pure indirect | 14.6 | |
Models were adjusted for age, sex and smoking habits. The exposure was O3. The mediators were plasma FlOPs levels. The outcome was persistent asthma