Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Sep 2024)

Risk of stroke admission after long-term exposure to PM1: Evidence from a large cohort in South China

  • Shirui Chen,
  • Yuqin Zhang,
  • Jing Wei,
  • Chun Hao,
  • Wenjing Wu,
  • Zhiqiang Li,
  • Tong Guo,
  • Ziqiang Lin,
  • Wangjian Zhang,
  • Yuantao Hao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 283
p. 116720

Abstract

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Background: Limited attention has been paid to the health effects of long-term PM1 exposure on stroke admission. Current investigations exploring the long-term PM exposure effect are largely based on observational studies, and PM generally is not allocated randomly to participants. Using traditional regression models might confuse messaging and hinder policy recommendations for pollution control and disease prevention policies. Methods: We conducted a cohort study among 36,271 adults from one of the largest cities in China in 2015 and followed up through 2020. Hazard ratios of stroke admissions following long-term PM1 exposure were estimated via a causal inference approach, marginal structural time-varying Cox proportional hazard model, accounting for multiple confounders. Additionally, several sensitivity analyses and impact modification analyses were carried out. Results and discussion: Associations with 1 μg/m3 increase in long-term PM1 were identified for total (HR, 1.079; 95 %CI, 1.012–1.151) and ischemic stroke admissions (HR, 1.092; 95 %CI, 1.018–1.171). The harmful associations varied with exposure duration, initially increasing and then decreasing. The 2–3 years cumulative exposure was associated with a 3.3–5.4 % raised risk for total stroke. For every 1 μg/m³ increase in long-term PM1 exposure, females exhibited a higher risk of both total and ischemic stroke (13 % and 16 %) than men (4 % and 5 %). Low-exposure individuals (whose annual PM1 concentrations were under the third quartile among the annual concentrations for all the participants) exhibited greater sensitivity to PM1 effects (total stroke: 1.079 vs. 1.107; ischemic stroke: 1.092 vs. 1.116). The results underline the importance of safeguarding low-exposed people in highly polluted areas and suggest that long-term PM1 exposure may increase stroke admission risk, warranting attention to vulnerable groups.

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