Short-term associations between daily mortality and ambient particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, and the air quality index in a Middle Eastern megacity
2019
Amini, Heresh | Trang Nhung, Nguyen Thi | Schindler, Christian | Yunesian, Masud | Hosseini, Vahid | Shamsipour, Mansour | Hassanvand, Mohammad Sadegh | Mohammadi, Younes | Farzadfar, Farshad | Vicedo-Cabrera, Ana M. | Schwartz, Joel | Henderson, Sarah B. | Künzli, Nino
There is limited evidence for short-term association between mortality and ambient air pollution in the Middle East and no study has evaluated exposure windows of about a month prior to death. We investigated all-cause non-accidental daily mortality and its association with fine particulate matter (PM₂.₅), nitrogen dioxide (NO₂), and the Air Quality Index (AQI) from March 2011 through March 2014 in the megacity of Tehran, Iran. Generalized additive quasi-Poisson models were used within a distributed lag linear modeling framework to estimate the cumulative effects of PM₂.₅, NO₂, and the AQI up to a lag of 45 days. We further conducted multi-pollutant models and also stratified the analyses by sex, age group, and season. The relative risk (95% confidence interval (CI)) for all seasons, both sexes and all ages at lag 0 for PM₂.₅, NO₂, and AQI were 1.004 (1.001, 1.007), 1.003 (0.999, 1.007), and 1.004 (1.001, 1.007), respectively, per inter-quartile range (IQR) increment (18.8 μg/m³ for PM₂.₅, 12.6 ppb for NO₂, and 31.5 for AQI). In multi-pollutant models, the PM₂.₅ associations were almost independent from NO₂. However, the RRs for NO₂ were slightly attenuated after adjustment for PM₂.₅ but they were still largely independent from PM₂.₅. The cumulative relative risks (95% CI) per IQR increment reached maximum during the cooler months, including: 1.13 (1.06, 1.20) for PM₂.₅ at lag 0–31 (for females, all ages); 1.17 (1.10, 1.25) for NO₂ at lag 0–45 (for males, all ages); and 1.13 (1.07, 1.20) for the AQI at lag 0–30 (for females, all ages). Generally, the RRs were slightly larger for NO₂ than PM₂.₅ and AQI. We found somewhat larger RRs in females, age group >65 years of age, and in cooler months. In summary, positive associations were found in most models. This is the first study to report short-term associations between all-cause non-accidental mortality and ambient PM₂.₅ and NO₂ in Iran.
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