Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Sep 2024)

The association between long-term exposure to ambient formaldehyde and respiratory mortality risk: A national study in China

  • Siwen Yu,
  • Qijiong Zhu,
  • Min Yu,
  • Chunliang Zhou,
  • Ruilin Meng,
  • Guoxia Bai,
  • Biao Huang,
  • Yize Xiao,
  • Wei Wu,
  • Yanfang Guo,
  • Juanjuan Zhang,
  • Weiling Tang,
  • Jiahong Xu,
  • Shuru Liang,
  • Zhiqing Chen,
  • Guanhao He,
  • Wenjun Ma,
  • Tao Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 283
p. 116860

Abstract

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Introduction: While ambient formaldehyde (HCHO) concentrations are increasing worldwide, there was limited research on its health effects. Objectives: To assess the association of long-term exposure to ambient HCHO with the risk of respiratory (RESP) mortality and the associated mortality burden in China. Methods: Annual and seasonal RESP death and tropospheric HCHO vertical columns data were collected in 466 counties/districts across China during 2013–2016. A difference-in-differences approach combined with a generalized linear mixed-effects regression model was employed to assess the exposure-response association between long-term ambient HCHO exposure and RESP mortality risk. Additionally, we computed the attributable fraction (AF) to gauge the proportion of RESP mortality attributable to HCHO exposure. Results: This analysis encompassed 560,929 RESP deaths. The annual mean ambient HCHO concentration across selected counties/districts was 8.02×1015 ± 2.22×1015 molec.cm−2 during 2013–2016. Each 1.00×1015 molec.cm−2 increase in ambient HCHO was associated with a 1.61 % increase [excess risk (ER), 95 % confidence interval (CI): 1.20 %, 2.03 %] in the RESP mortality risk. The AF of RESP mortality attributable to HCHO was 12.16 % (95 %CI:9.33 %, 14.88 %), resulting in an annual average of 125,422 (95 %CI:96,404, 153,410) attributable deaths in China. Stratified analyses suggested stronger associations in individuals aged ≥65 years old (ER=1.87 %, 95 %CI:1.43 %, 2.32 %), in cold seasons (ER=1.00 %, 95 %CI:0.56 %, 1.44 %), in urban areas (ER=1.65 %, 95 %CI:1.15 %, 2.16 %), and in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients (ER=1.95 %, 95 %CI:1.42 %, 2.48 %). Conclusions: This study suggested that long-term HCHO exposure may significantly increase the risk of RESP mortality, leading to a substantial mortality burden. Targeted measures should be implemented to control ambient HCHO pollution promptly.

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