Triggering of cardiovascular hospital admissions by fine particle concentrations in New York state: Before, during, and after implementation of multiple environmental policies and a recession
2018
Zhang, Wangjian | Lin, Shao | Hopke, Philip K. | Thurston, Sally W. | van Wijngaarden, Edwin | Croft, Daniel | Squizzato, Stefania | Masiol, Mauro | Rich, David Q.
Previous studies reported triggering of acute cardiovascular events by short-term increasedPM₂.₅ concentrations. From 2007 to 2013, national and New York state air quality policies and economic influences resulted in reduced concentrations of PM₂.₅ and other pollutants across the state. We estimated the rate of cardiovascular hospital admissions associated with increased PM₂.₅ concentrations in the previous 1–7 days, and evaluated whether they differed before (2005–2007), during (2008–2013), and after these concentration changes (2014–2016).Using the Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS) database, we retained all hospital admissions with a primary diagnosis of nine cardiovascular disease (CVD) subtypes, for residents living within 15 miles of PM₂.₅ monitoring sites in Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, Queens, Bronx, and Manhattan from 2005 to 2016 (N = 1,922,918). We used a case-crossover design and conditional logistic regression to estimate the admission rate for total CVD, and nine specific subtypes, associated with increased PM₂.₅ concentrations.Interquartile range (IQR) increases in PM₂.₅ on the same and previous 6 days were associated with 0.6%–1.2% increases in CVD admission rate (2005–2016). There were similar patterns for cardiac arrhythmia, ischemic stroke, congestive heart failure, ischemic heart disease (IHD), and myocardial infarction (MI). Ambient PM₂.₅ concentrations and annual total CVD admission rates decreased across the period. However, the excess rate of IHD admissions associated with each IQR increase in PM₂.₅ in previous 2 days was larger in the after period (2.8%; 95%CI = 1.5%–4.0%) than in the during (0.6%; 95%CI = 0.0%–1.2%) or before periods (0.8%; 95%CI = 0.2%–1.3%), with similar patterns for total CVD and MI, but not other subtypes.While pollutant concentrations and CVD admission rates decreased after emission changes, the same PM₂.₅ mass was associated with a higher rate of ischemic heart disease events. Future work should confirm these findings in another population, and investigate whether specific PM components and/or sources trigger IHD events.
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