| Literature DB >> 31706295 |
Shih-Yung Su1,2, Yung-Po Liaw3, Jing-Rong Jhuang1, Shu-Yi Hsu3, Chun-Ju Chiang1,4, Ya-Wen Yang4, Wen-Chung Lee5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Air pollution is a global public health concern. The World Health Organization has recently set up a goal of saving 7 million people globally by 2030 from air pollution related death. We conducted an ecological study of geographical variation to explore the association between air pollution (specifically, particulate matter <2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter [PM2.5], particulate matter <10 μm in aerodynamic diameter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, nitric oxide, and ozone) and cancer incidence in Taiwan, from 2012 to 2016.Entities:
Keywords: Air pollution; Cancer; Correlation; Geographical variation; Incidence; Kriging method
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31706295 PMCID: PMC6842529 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-7849-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1The 349 local administrative areas, 75 monitoring stations and 7 degrees of urbanization
Fig. 2Cancer map. Decile is used for classification of pattern
Distribution of air pollution concentration from 2012 to 2016
| Air pollutant (units) | Mean (SD) | Minimum | Percentiles | Maximum | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5th | 25th | 50th | 75th | 95th | ||||
| PM2.5 (μg/m3) | 25.182 (7.502) | 6.280 | 12.297 | 20.189 | 25.109 | 29.803 | 39.255 | 45.380 |
| PM10 (μg/m3) | 49.500 (13.615) | 15.690 | 28.400 | 39.316 | 48.454 | 59.708 | 72.443 | 81.931 |
| SO2 (ppb) | 3.338 (1.237) | 1.203 | 1.715 | 2.626 | 3.102 | 3.828 | 6.037 | 8.861 |
| NOx (ppb) | 20.470 (14.044) | 2.374 | 7.749 | 13.601 | 17.726 | 23.215 | 37.012 | 116.787 |
| O3 (ppb) | 28.952 (3.726) | 16.677 | 23.026 | 26.729 | 28.734 | 31.053 | 36.035 | 42.777 |
SD indicates standard deviation
NOx refers to the combination of NO and NO2
Fig. 3Air pollution map. Decile is used for classification of pattern
Spearman’s rank correlation coefficients between the age-adjusted cancer incidence rate and the various air pollutants by gender and urbanization degrees
| Men | Women | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PM2.5 | PM10 | SO2 | NOx | O3 | PM2.5 | PM10 | SO2 | NOx | O3 | |
| Metropolises | 0.457a | 0.276 | 0.515a | −0.326 | 0.465a | 0.214 | 0.236 | −0.037 | −0.344 | 0.542a |
| Cities | 0.280 | 0.327a | 0.300 | 0.083 | −0.210 | 0.132 | 0.195 | 0.163 | 0.131 | −0.050 |
| Developing towns | 0.599b | 0.340a | 0.022 | 0.334a | −0.136 | 0.244 | 0.285a | −0.025 | 0.356a | 0.070 |
| General towns | 0.450b | −0.011 | 0.340a | 0.013 | −0.151 | 0.248a | −0.099 | 0.236a | −0.022 | −0.128 |
| Aged towns | 0.664b | 0.144 | 0.179 | −0.102 | 0.225 | 0.634b | −0.067 | 0.305 | −0.235 | 0.336 |
| Agricultural towns | 0.247 | −0.147 | 0.211 | −0.240 | −0.138 | 0.122 | −0.017 | 0.211 | −0.181 | 0.028 |
| Villages | 0.371a | −0.050 | 0.214 | 0.015 | 0.106 | −0.218 | −0.002 | − 0.043 | 0.029 | − 0.094 |
aindicates significance at an alpha level of 0.05
bindicates significance at the Bonferroni-corrected alpha level of 0.000714 (a total of 70 hypothesis tests being performed)
Fig. 4Dose-response relationship of age-adjusted cancer incidence and fine particulate matter in developing towns (panel A), general towns (panel B) and aged towns (panel C) for males and aged towns (panel D) for females