articleCirculationDec 16, 2003Closed access

Cardiovascular Mortality and Long-Term Exposure to Particulate Air Pollution

American Cancer Society · Williams & Associates

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Epidemiologic studies have linked long-term exposure to fine particulate matter air pollution (PM) to broad cause-of-death mortality. Associations with specific cardiopulmonary diseases might be useful in exploring potential mechanistic pathways linking exposure and mortality. METHODS AND RESULTS: General pathophysiological pathways linking long-term PM exposure with mortality and expected patterns of PM mortality with specific causes of death were proposed a priori. Vital status, risk factor, and cause-of-death data, collected by the American Cancer Society as part of the Cancer Prevention II study, were linked with air pollution data from United States metropolitan areas. Cox Proportional Hazard regression models were used to estimate PM-mortality associations with specific causes of death. Long-term PM exposures were most strongly associated with mortality attributable to ischemic heart disease, dysrhythmias, heart failure, and cardiac arrest. For these cardiovascular causes of death, a 10-microg/m3 elevation in fine PM was associated with 8% to 18% increases in mortality risk, with comparable or larger risks being observed for smokers relative to nonsmokers. Mortality attributable to respiratory disease had relatively weak associations.

Conclusions

Fine particulate air pollution is a risk factor for cause-specific cardiovascular disease mortality via mechanisms that likely include pulmonary and systemic inflammation, accelerated atherosclerosis, and altered cardiac autonomic function. Although smoking is a much larger risk factor for cardiovascular disease mortality, exposure to fine PM imposes additional effects that seem to be at least additive to if not synergistic with smoking.

Citation impact

2,605
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FWCI
39.64
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100%
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43
Citations per year

Authors

7

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Risk factor
  • Cause of death
  • Proportional hazards model
  • Disease
  • Hazard ratio
  • Environmental health
  • Internal medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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