Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Sep 2023)

Short-term exposure to reduced specific-size ambient particulate matter increase the risk of cause-specific cardiovascular disease: A national-wide evidence from hospital admissions

  • Yaohua Tian,
  • Junhui Wu,
  • Yiqun Wu,
  • Mengying Wang,
  • Siyue Wang,
  • Ruotong Yang,
  • Xiaowen Wang,
  • Jiating Wang,
  • Huan Yu,
  • Dankang Li,
  • Tao Wu,
  • Jing Wei,
  • Yonghua Hu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 263
p. 115327

Abstract

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Evidence for the health effects of ambient PM1 (particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter ≤ 1 µm) pollution is limited, and it remains unclear whether a smaller particulate matter has a greater impact on human health. We conducted a time-series study in 184 major cities by extracting daily hospital data on admissions for ischemic heart disease, heart failure, heart rhythm disturbances, and stroke between 2014 and 2017 from a medical insurance claims database of 0.28 billion beneficiaries. City-specific associations were estimated with over-dispersed generalized additive models. A random-effects meta-analysis was used to estimate regional and national average associations. We conducted stratified and meta-regression analyses to explore potential effect modifiers of the association. We recorded 8.83 million cardiovascular admissions during the study period. At the national-average level, a 10-μg/m3 increase in same-day PM1, PM2.5(particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter ≤ 2.5 µm) and PM10(particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter ≤ 10 µm) concentrations corresponded to a 1.14% (95% confidence interval 0.88–1.41%), 0.55% (0.40–0.70%), and 0.45% (0.36–0.55%) increase in cardiovascular admissions, respectively. PM1 exposure was also positively associated with all cardiovascular disease subtypes, including ischemic heart disease (1.28% change; 0.99–1.56%), heart failure (1.30% change; 0.70–1.91%), heart rhythm disturbances (1.11% change; 0.65–1.58%), and ischemic stroke (1.29% change; 0.88–1.71%). The associations between PM1 and cardiovascular admissions were stronger in cities with lower PM1 levels, higher air temperatures and relative humidity, as well as in subgroups with elder age (all P < 0.05). This study provides robust evidence of short-term associations between PM1 concentrations and increased hospital admissions for all major cardiovascular diseases in China. Our findings suggest a greater short-term impact on cardiovascular risk from PM1 in comparison to PM2.5 and PM10.

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