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Abstract Title:

Ambient NOexposure hinders long-term survival of Chinese middle-aged and older adults.

Abstract Source:

Sci Total Environ. 2022 Sep 15 ;855:158784. Epub 2022 Sep 15. PMID: 36116662

Abstract Author(s):

Yaqi Wang, Siqi Luo, Jing Wei, Zhiming Yang, Kejia Hu, Yao Yao, Yunquan Zhang

Article Affiliation:

Yaqi Wang

Abstract:

INTRODUCTION: Serval longitudinal investigations have reported relationships between long-term nitrogen dioxide (NO) exposure and mortality. In developing countries such as China, however, the cohort evidence was extremely rare. In this study, we aimed to establish the concentration-response relationship between long-term exposure to NOand mortality in Chinese adults.

METHODS: We conducted a prospective cohort study followed up from 2011 to 2018, by enrolling 15,440 participants aged≥45 years from 28 provincial regions of China. NOconcentration estimates were derived from high-quality spatiotemporal datasets developed by machine learning methods and were assigned for each participant according to their residential cities. We applied Cox proportional hazard models with time-varying exposures to assess the association of all-cause death with long-term NOexposure. Subgroup analyses were performed to identify effect modifications.

RESULTS: A total of 1646 death events occurred during 105,478.5 person-years' follow-up (median 7.1 years). No evident violation for linear NO-mortality relationship (P nonlinear = 0.332) was observed at a range of 7.4-45.0μg/m. Per 10-μg/mrise in NOwas associated with an hazard ratio of 1.220 (95% confidence interval: 1.103-1.350) for all-cause mortality. The association between NOand mortality was generally robust after adjusting for co-pollutants including fine particulate matter or/and ozone. Only participants aged 65 and over (1.351 [1.193-1.531]) suffered from increased risks of death associated with NOexposure, and an evident effect modification by age (P = 0.008) was identified. The elevated risk of death induced by NOwas also observed in participants living in rural areas and those with elementary school education or below, though effect modifications were non-significant in these subgroups.

CONCLUSIONS: This study provided novel evidence that long-term NOexposure could be an independent risk for mortality among Chinese middle-aged and older adults. Our findings highlighted the importance of controlling air pollution induced by vehicle emissions.

Study Type : Human Study

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