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Particulate air pollution as a predictor of
mortality in a prospective study of U.S. adults.
Pope
CA 3rd, Thun
MJ, Namboodiri
MM, Dockery
DW, Evans
JS, Speizer
FE, Heath
CW Jr.
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School
of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Time-series,
cross-sectional, and prospective cohort studies have observed
associations between mortality and particulate air pollution but have
been limited by ecologic design or small number of subjects or study
areas. The present study evaluates effects of particulate air pollution
on mortality using data from a large cohort drawn from many study areas.
We linked ambient air pollution data from 151 U.S. metropolitan areas in
1980 with individual risk factor on 552,138 adults who resided in these
areas when enrolled in a prospective study in 1982. Deaths were
ascertained through December, 1989. Exposure to sulfate and fine
particulate air pollution, which is primarily from fossil fuel
combustion, was estimated from national data bases. The relationships of
air pollution to all-cause, lung cancer, and cardiopulmonary mortality
was examined using multivariate analysis which controlled for smoking,
education, and other risk factors. Although small compared with
cigarette smoking, an association between mortality and particulate air
pollution was observed. Adjusted relative risk ratios (and 95%
confidence intervals) of all-cause mortality for the most polluted areas
compared with the least polluted equaled 1.15 (1.09 to 1.22) and 1.17
(1.09 to 1.26) when using sulfate and fine particulate measures
respectively. Particulate air pollution was associated with
cardiopulmonary and lung cancer mortality but not with mortality due to
other causes. Increased mortality is associated with sulfate and fine
particulate air pollution at levels commonly found in U.S. cities. The
increase in risk is not attributable to tobacco smoking, although other
unmeasured correlates of pollution cannot be excluded with
certainty.
PMID: 7881654 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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