Spatial variation in nitrogen dioxide concentrations and cardiopulmonary hospital admissions

Marieke B A Dijkema, Robert T van Strien, Saskia C van der Zee, Sanne F Mallant, Paul Fischer, Gerard Hoek, Bert Brunekreef, Ulrike Gehring*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: Air pollution episodes are associated with increased cardiopulmonary hospital admissions. Cohort studies showed associations of spatial variation in traffic-related air pollution with respiratory and cardiovascular mortality. Much less is known in particular about associations with cardiovascular morbidity. We explored the relation between spatial variation in nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concentrations and cardiopulmonary hospital admissions.

    METHODS: This ecological study was based on hospital admissions data (2001-2004) from the National Medical Registration and general population data for the West of the Netherlands (population 4.04 million). At the 4-digit postcode area level (n=683) associations between modeled annual average outdoor NO2 concentrations and hospital admissions for respiratory and cardiovascular causes were evaluated by linear regression with the log of the postcode-specific percentage of subjects that have been admitted at least once during the study period as the dependent variable. All analyses were adjusted for differences in composition of the population of the postcode areas (age, sex, income).

    RESULTS: At the postcode level, positive associations were found between outdoor NO2 concentrations and hospital admission rates for asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), all cardiovascular causes, ischemic heart disease and stroke (e.g. adjusted relative risk (95% confidence interval) for the second to fourth quartile relative to the first quartile of exposure were 1.87 (1.46-2.40), 2.34 (1.83-3.01) and 2.81 (2.16-3.65) for asthma; 1.44 (1.19-1.74), 1.50 (1.24-1.82) and 1.60 (1.31-1.96) for COPD). Associations remained after additional (indirect) adjustment for smoking (COPD admission rate) and degree of urbanization.

    CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests an increased risk of hospitalization for respiratory and cardiovascular causes in areas with higher levels of NO2. Our findings add to the currently limited evidence of a long-term effect of air pollution on hospitalization. The ecological design of our study is a limitation and more studies with individual data are needed to confirm our findings.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)721-727
    Number of pages7
    JournalEnvironmental Research
    Volume151
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Nov 2016

    Keywords

    • Air pollution
    • Cardiovascular
    • Hospital admission
    • Nitrogen dioxide
    • Respiratory

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