石油和天然气开发暴露与心房颤动加重:利用科罗拉多州所有支付方索赔数据集对心房颤动加重进行的回顾性研究。

Frontiers in epidemiology Pub Date : 2024-06-19 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fepid.2024.1379271
Lisa M McKenzie, William B Allshouse, Barbara Abrahams, Christine Tompkins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:心房颤动是临床上最常见、最严重的心律失常,其发病和发作(加重)的新风险因素包括空气和噪声污染,而这两种污染都是在石油和天然气(O&G)井场开发过程中排放的:我们采用新颖的数据源和间断时间序列设计,评估了房颤恶化风险和邻近石油与天然气(O&G)井场开发的情况。我们对科罗拉多州所有支付者索赔数据集中的 1,197 名心房颤动患者和 9,764 名心房颤动患者进行了回顾性随访,前者居住在距离石油和天然气井场 1 英里范围内(有暴露风险),后者居住在距离任何石油和天然气井场 >2 英里范围内(未暴露),并在石油和天然气井场开发之前、期间和之后进行了心房颤动索赔。我们通过多失败生存分析计算了房颤恶化风险:对全部研究人群的分析并未提供有力证据证明房颤恶化与开发期间(HR = 1.07,95% CI:0.94, 1.22)或开发之后(HR = 1.01,95% CI:0.88, 1.16)邻近油气井地点之间存在关联。然而,房颤恶化的风险因患者的年龄和性别而异。对于年龄大于 80 岁、居住在距离油气井开发项目 0.39 英里(2,059 英尺)范围内的患者,心房颤动恶化风险在开发期间增加了 83%(HR = 1.83,95% CI:1.25, 2.66),因心房颤动事件前往急诊室就诊的人数增加了一倍(HR = 2.55,95% CI:1.50, 4.36),风险随距离的远近而增加。对于居住在距离油气井开发地 0.39 英里范围内的女性患者,开发期间房颤恶化风险增加了 56% (95% CI: 1.13, 2.15)。心房颤动恶化风险在油井开发期间并未持续。我们没有发现年轻或男性患者的房颤恶化风险增加:讨论:邻近油气井开发(一个重要的噪音和空气污染源)可能会增加老年和女性房颤患者房颤恶化的风险,这一前景需要引起重视。这些发现支持对患者进行适当的教育,以帮助降低风险,并制定缓解策略和法规,以保护石油和天然气开发地区居民的健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Oil and gas development exposure and atrial fibrillation exacerbation: a retrospective study of atrial fibrillation exacerbation using Colorado's all payer claims dataset.

Introduction: Emerging risk factors for atrial fibrillation (AF) incidence and episodes (exacerbation), the most common and clinically significant cardiac arrhythmia, include air and noise pollution, both of which are emitted during oil and natural gas (O&G) well site development.

Methods: We evaluated AF exacerbation risk and proximity to O&G well site development by employing a novel data source and interrupted time-series design. We retrospectively followed 1,197 AF patients living within 1-mile of an O&G well site (at-risk of exposure) and 9,764 patients living >2 miles from any O&G well site (unexposed) for AF claims in Colorado's All Payer Claims Dataset before, during, and after O&G well site development. We calculated AF exacerbation risk with multi-failure survival analysis.

Results: The analysis of the total study population does not provide strong evidence of an association between AF exacerbation and proximity to O&G wells sites during (HR = 1.07, 95% CI: 0.94, 1.22) or after (HR = 1.01, 95% CI: 0.88, 1.16) development. However, AF exacerbation risk differed by patient age and sex. In patients >80 years living within 0.39 miles (2,059 feet) of O&G well site development, AF exacerbation risk increased by 83% (HR = 1.83, 95% CI: 1.25, 2.66) and emergency room visits for an AF event doubled (HR = 2.55, 95% CI: 1.50, 4.36) during development, with risk increasing with proximity. In female patients living within 0.39 miles of O&G well site development, AF exacerbation risk increased by 56% percent (95% CI: 1.13, 2.15) during development. AF exacerbation risk did not persist past the well development period. We did not observe increased AF exacerbation risk in younger or male patients.

Discussion: The prospect that proximity to O&G well site development, a significant noise and air pollution source, may increase AF exacerbation risk in older and female AF patients requires attention. These findings support appropriate patient education to help mitigate risk and development of mitigation strategies and regulations to protect the health of populations in O&G development regions.

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