J. Sunyer et X. Basagana, Particles, and not gases, are associated with the risk of death in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, INT J EPID, 30(5), 2001, pp. 1138-1140
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health","Medical Research General Topics
Objectives We aim to assess the independent association of particles, after
controlling for gaseous pollutants, with the risk of death among a cohort
of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Methods Residents of Barcelona, aged over 35 years, who attended emergency
room services for COPD exacerbation from 1985 to 1989 and who died in the p
eriod 1990-1995 (n = 2305) were selected. The analysis followed a case-cros
sover procedure with ambidirectional controls. Air pollution exposure (part
iculate matter < 10 mum (PM10), ozone, nitrogen dioxide and carbon monoxide
) was measured at the city monitoring stations.
Results Levels of PM10 (odds ratio for the interquartile difference = 1.11,
95% CI 1.00-1.24), but not gaseous pollutants, were associated with mortal
ity for all causes of death after adjusting for meteorological variables an
d influenza epidemics. In the two-pollutant models, the association of mort
ality with PM10 was not confounded by the inclusion of gases, while the ass
ociation of gaseous pollutants was notably reduced after adjustment for par
ticles. There was no interaction between particles and gaseous pollutants.
Conclusions Findings reinforce the deleterious role of urban particles as a
trigger of death in COPD patients, and suggest that they are the major cul
prit among the air pollutants. The role of other pollutants, if any, was ad
ditive and not multiplicative.