Part 5. Public health and air pollution in Asia (PAPA): a combined analysis of four studies of air pollution and mortality.

C M Wong, N Vichit-Vadakan, N Vajanapoom, B Ostro, T Q Thach, P Y K Chau, E K P Chan, R Y N Chung, C Q Ou, L Yang, J S M Peiris, G N Thomas, T H Lam, T W Wong, A J Hedley, H Kan, B Chen, N Zhao, S J London, G Song, G Chen, Y Zhang, L Jiang, Z Qian, Q He, H M Lin, L Kong, D Zhou, S Liang, Z Zhu, D Liao, W Liu, C M Bentley, J Dan, B Wang, N Yang, S Xu, J Gong, H Wei, H Sun, Z Qin
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Although the deleterious effects of air pollution from fossil-fuel combustion have been demonstrated in many Western nations, few comparable studies have been conducted in Asia. Time-series studies of daily mortality in Asian cities can contribute important new information to the existing body of knowledge about air pollution and health. Not only can these studies verify important health effects of air pollution in local regions in Asia, they can also help determine the relevance of existing air pollution studies to mortality and morbidity for policymaking and environmental controls. In addition, the studies can help identify factors that might modify associations between air pollution and health effects in various populations and environmental conditions. Collaborative multicity studies in Asia-especially when designed, conducted, and analyzed using a common protocol-will provide more robust air pollution effect estimates for the region as well as relevant, supportable estimates of local adverse health effects needed by environmental and public-health policymakers.</p><p><strong>Specific objectives: </strong>The Public Health and Air Pollution in Asia (PAPA*) project, sponsored by the Health Effects Institute, consisted of four studies designed to assess the effects of air pollution on mortality in four large Asian cities, namely Bangkok, in Thailand, and Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Wuhan, in China. In the PAPA project, a Common Protocol was developed based on methods developed and tested in NMMAPS, APHEA, and time-series studies in the literature to help ensure that the four studies could be compared with each other and with previous studies by following an established protocol. The Common Protocol (found at the end of this volume) is a set of prescriptive instructions developed for the studies and used by the investigators in each city. It is flexible enough to allow for adjustments in methods to optimize the fit of health-effects models to each city's data set. It provides the basis for generating reproducible results in each city and for meta-estimates from combined data. By establishing a common methodology, factors that might influence the differences in results from previous studies can more easily be explored. Administrative support was provided to ensure that the highest quality data were used in the analysis. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: In recent years, Asia has experienced rapid economic growth and a deteriorating environment caused by the increasing use of fossil fuels. Although the deleterious effects of air pollution from fossil-fuel combustion have been demonstrated in many Western nations, few comparable studies have been conducted in Asia. Time-series studies of daily mortality in Asian cities can contribute important new information to the existing body of knowledge about air pollution and health. Not only can these studies verify important health effects of air pollution in local regions in Asia, they can also help determine the relevance of existing air pollution studies to mortality and morbidity for policymaking and environmental controls. In addition, the studies can help identify factors that might modify associations between air pollution and health effects in various populations and environmental conditions. Collaborative multicity studies in Asia-especially when designed, conducted, and analyzed using a common protocol-will provide more robust air pollution effect estimates for the region as well as relevant, supportable estimates of local adverse health effects needed by environmental and public-health policymakers.

Specific objectives: The Public Health and Air Pollution in Asia (PAPA*) project, sponsored by the Health Effects Institute, consisted of four studies designed to assess the effects of air pollution on mortality in four large Asian cities, namely Bangkok, in Thailand, and Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Wuhan, in China. In the PAPA project, a Common Protocol was developed based on methods developed and tested in NMMAPS, APHEA, and time-series studies in the literature to help ensure that the four studies could be compared with each other and with previous studies by following an established protocol. The Common Protocol (found at the end of this volume) is a set of prescriptive instructions developed for the studies and used by the investigators in each city. It is flexible enough to allow for adjustments in methods to optimize the fit of health-effects models to each city's data set. It provides the basis for generating reproducible results in each city and for meta-estimates from combined data. By establishing a common methodology, factors that might influence the differences in results from previous studies can more easily be explored. Administrative support was provided to ensure that the highest quality data were used in the analysis. It is anticipated that the PAPA results will contribute to the international scientific discussion of how to conduct and interpret time-series studies of air pollution and will stimulate the development of high-quality routine systems for recording daily deaths and hospital admissions for time-series analysis.

Methods: Mortality data were retrieved from routine databases with underlying causes of death coded using the World Health Organization (WHO) International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision or 10th revision (ICD-9, ICD-10). Air quality measurements included nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter < or = 10 microm (PM10), and ozone (O3) and were obtained from several fixed-site air monitoring stations that were located throughout the metropolitan areas of the four cities and that met the standards of procedures for quality assurance and quality control carried out by local government units in each city. Using the Common Protocol, an optimized core model was established for each city to assess the effects of each of the four air pollutants on daily mortality using generalized linear modeling with adjustments for time trend, seasonality, and other time-varying covariates by means of a natural-spline smoothing function. The models were adjusted to suit local situations by correcting for influenza activity, autocorrelation, and special weather conditions. Researchers in Hong Kong, for example, used influenza activity based on frequency of respiratory mortality; researchers in Hong Kong and Shanghai used autoregressive terms for daily outcomes at lag days; and researchers in Wuhan used additional smoothing for periods with extreme weather conditions.

Results and discussion: For mortality due to all natural (nonaccidental) causes at all ages, the effects of air pollutants per 10-microg/m3 increase in concentration was found to be higher in Bangkok than in the three Chinese cities, with the exception of the effect of NO2 in Wuhan. The magnitude of the effects for cardiovascular and respiratory mortality were generally higher than for all natural mortality at all ages. In addition, the effects associated with PM10 and O3 in all natural, cardiovascular; and respiratory mortality were found to be higher in Bangkok than in the three Chinese cities. The explanation for these three findings might be related to consistently higher daily mean temperatures in Bangkok, variations in average time spent outdoors by the susceptible populations, and the fact that less air conditioning is available and used in Bangkok than in the other cities. However, when pollutant concentrations were incorporated into the excess risk estimates through the use of interquartile range (IQR), the excess risk was more comparable across the four cities. We found that the increases in effects among older age groups were greater in Bangkok than in the other three cities. After excluding data on extremely high concentrations of PM10 in Bangkok, the effect estimate associated with PM10 concentrations decreased in Bangkok (suggesting a convex relationship between risk and PM10, where risk levels off at high concentrations) instead of increasing, as it did in the other cities. This leveling off of effect estimates at high concentrations might be related to differences in vulnerability and exposure of the population to air pollution as well as to the sources of the air pollutant. IMPLICATIONS OF THE STUDY: The PAPA project is the first coordinated Asian multicity air pollution study ever published; this signifies the beginning of an era of cooperation and collaboration in Asia, with the development of a common protocol for coordination, data management, and analysis. The results of the study demonstrated that air pollution in Asia is a significant public health burden, especially given the high concentrations of pollutants and high-density populations in major cities. When compared with the effect estimates reported in the research literature of North America and Western Europe, the study's effect estimates for PM10 were generally similar and the effect estimates for gaseous pollutants were relatively higher. In Bangkok, however, a tropical city where total exposures to outdoor pollution might be higher than in most other cities, the observed effects were greater than those reported in the previous (i.e., Western) studies. In general, the results suggested that, even though social and environmental conditions across Asia might vary, it is still generally appropriate to apply to Asia the effect estimates for other health outcomes from previous studies in the West. The results also strongly support the adoption of the global air quality guidelines recently announced by WHO.

第5部分。亚洲的公共卫生和空气污染:对四项空气污染和死亡率研究的综合分析。
背景:近年来,亚洲经历了快速的经济增长和日益增加的化石燃料使用造成的环境恶化。尽管化石燃料燃烧造成的空气污染的有害影响已经在许多西方国家得到证实,但在亚洲却很少进行类似的研究。亚洲城市每日死亡率的时间序列研究可以为现有的空气污染与健康知识体系提供重要的新信息。这些研究不仅可以核实空气污染在亚洲局部区域对健康的重要影响,还可以帮助确定现有空气污染研究与死亡率和发病率的相关性,以供决策和环境控制之用。此外,这些研究可以帮助确定可能改变不同人群和环境条件下空气污染与健康影响之间关系的因素。在亚洲进行多城市合作研究,特别是在设计、实施和分析时使用共同的协议,将为该地区提供更可靠的空气污染影响估计,以及环境和公共卫生政策制定者所需的有关的、可支持的当地不利健康影响估计。具体目标:由健康影响研究所赞助的亚洲公共卫生和空气污染项目包括四项研究,旨在评估空气污染对亚洲四个大城市(泰国曼谷和中国香港、上海和武汉)死亡率的影响。在PAPA项目中,根据在NMMAPS、APHEA和文献中的时间序列研究中开发和测试的方法,制定了一个共同协议,以帮助确保这四项研究可以相互比较,并通过遵循既定的协议与以前的研究进行比较。《共同议定书》(见本卷末尾)是为研究制定的一套说明性说明,供每个城市的调查人员使用。它有足够的灵活性,允许调整方法,以优化健康影响模型与每个城市的数据集的拟合。它为在每个城市产生可重复的结果和根据综合数据进行元估计提供了基础。通过建立一个共同的方法,可以更容易地探索可能影响先前研究结果差异的因素。提供了行政支助,以确保在分析中使用最高质量的数据。预计PAPA的结果将有助于关于如何进行和解释空气污染时间序列研究的国际科学讨论,并将促进发展高质量的常规系统,记录每日死亡和住院情况,以便进行时间序列分析。方法:死亡率数据从常规数据库中检索,潜在死亡原因使用世界卫生组织(WHO)国际疾病分类,第9版或第10版(ICD-9, ICD-10)进行编码。空气质量测量包括二氧化氮(NO2)、二氧化硫(SO2)、空气动力学直径<或= 10微米的颗粒物(PM10)和臭氧(O3),这些测量数据来自四个城市市区的几个固定空气监测站,这些监测站符合每个城市当地政府单位实施的质量保证和质量控制程序的标准。利用通用协议,为每个城市建立了优化的核心模型,利用广义线性模型,通过自然样条平滑函数调整时间趋势、季节性和其他时变协变量,评估四种空气污染物对日死亡率的影响。通过校正流感活动、自相关性和特殊天气条件,对模型进行了调整,以适应当地情况。例如,香港的研究人员根据呼吸道死亡的频率来使用流感活动;香港和上海的研究人员使用自回归术语来描述滞后日的日常结果;武汉的研究人员对极端天气条件的时期进行了额外的平滑处理。结果和讨论:对于所有年龄段的自然(非意外)原因造成的死亡率,曼谷的空气污染物浓度每增加10微克/立方米的影响高于中国三个城市,武汉的二氧化氮影响除外。心血管和呼吸系统死亡率的影响程度普遍高于所有年龄段的自然死亡率。此外,PM10和O3对所有天然、心血管;曼谷的呼吸系统死亡率高于这三个中国城市。 对这三个发现的解释可能与曼谷持续较高的日平均气温,易感人群在户外的平均时间的变化,以及曼谷空调的可用和使用比其他城市少的事实有关。然而,当污染物浓度通过使用四分位数范围(IQR)纳入超额风险估计时,四个城市的超额风险更具可比性。我们发现,曼谷的老年人群受到的影响比其他三个城市更大。在排除了曼谷极高浓度PM10的数据后,与PM10浓度相关的影响估计在曼谷下降(表明风险与PM10之间存在凸关系,在高浓度时风险趋于平稳),而不是像在其他城市那样增加。高浓度影响估计值的这种趋于稳定可能与人口对空气污染的脆弱性和暴露程度以及空气污染物来源的差异有关。研究的意义:PAPA项目是有史以来第一个协调的亚洲多城市空气污染研究;随着协调、数据管理和分析的共同协议的制定,这标志着亚洲合作与协作时代的开始。研究结果表明,亚洲的空气污染是一项重大的公共卫生负担,特别是考虑到主要城市的污染物浓度高,人口密度高。与北美和西欧研究文献报道的影响估计相比,该研究对PM10的影响估计大致相似,对气态污染物的影响估计相对较高。然而,在曼谷这个热带城市,室外污染的总暴露量可能高于大多数其他城市,观察到的影响比以前(即西方)研究报告的影响更大。总的来说,研究结果表明,尽管亚洲各地的社会和环境条件可能有所不同,但一般来说,将西方先前研究中对其他健康结果的影响估计应用于亚洲仍然是合适的。调查结果还有力地支持采用世卫组织最近宣布的全球空气质量指南。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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