Environment International (Aug 2023)

Can traffic-related air pollution trigger myocardial infarction within a few hours of exposure? Identifying hourly hazard periods

  • Jenni A. Shearston,
  • Sebastian T. Rowland,
  • Tanya Butt,
  • Steven N. Chillrud,
  • Joan A. Casey,
  • Donald Edmondson,
  • Markus Hilpert,
  • Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 178
p. 108086

Abstract

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Introduction: Traffic-related air pollution can trigger myocardial infarction (MI). However, the hourly hazard period of exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2), a common traffic tracer, for incident MI has not been fully evaluated. Thus, the current hourly US national air quality standard (100 ppb) is based on limited hourly-level effect estimates, which may not adequately protect cardiovascular health. Objectives: We characterized the hourly hazard period of NO2 exposure for MI in New York state (NYS), USA, from 2000 to 2015. Methods: For nine cities in NYS, we obtained data on MI hospitalizations from the NYS Department of Health Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System and hourly NO2 concentrations from the US Environmental Protection Agency’s Air Quality System database. We used city-wide exposures and a case-crossover study design with distributed lag non-linear terms to assess the relationship between hourly NO2 concentrations over 24 h and MI, adjusting for hourly temperature and relative humidity. Results: The mean NO2 concentration was 23.2 ppb (standard deviation: 12.6 ppb). In the six hours preceding MI, we found linearly increased risk with increasing NO2 concentrations. At lag hour 0, a 10 ppb increase in NO2 was associated with 0.2 % increased risk of MI (Rate Ratio [RR]: 1.002; 95 % Confidence Interval [CI]: 1.000, 1.004). We estimated a cumulative RR of 1.015 (95 % CI: 1.008, 1.021) for all 24 lag hours per 10 ppb increase in NO2. Lag hours 2–3 had consistently elevated risk ratios in sensitivity analyses. Conclusions: We found robust associations between hourly NO2 exposure and MI risk at concentrations far lower than current hourly NO2 national standards. Risk of MI was most elevated in the six hours after exposure, consistent with prior studies and experimental work evaluating physiologic responses after acute traffic exposure. Our findings suggest that current hourly standards may be insufficient to protect cardiovascular health.

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