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Mixtures of long-term exposure to ambient air pollution, built environment and temperature and stroke incidence across Europe

de Bont, J. and Pickford, R. and Åström, C. and Colomar, F. and Dimakopoulou, K. and de Hoogh, K. and Ibi, D. and Katsouyanni, K. and Melén, E. and Nobile, F. and Pershagen, G. and Persson, A. and Samoli, E. and Stafoggia, M. and Tonne, C. and Vlaanderen, J. and Wolf, K. and Vermeulen, R. and Peters, A. and Ljungman, P.. (2023) Mixtures of long-term exposure to ambient air pollution, built environment and temperature and stroke incidence across Europe. Environment international, 179. p. 108136.

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The complex interplay of multiple environmental factors and cardiovascular has scarcely been studied. Within the EXPANSE project, we evaluated the association between long-term exposure to multiple environmental indices and stroke incidence across Europe. METHODS: Participants from three traditional adult cohorts (Germany, Netherlands and Sweden) and four administrative cohorts (Catalonia [region Spain], Rome [city-wide], Greece and Sweden [nationwide]) were followed until incident stroke, death, migration, loss of follow-up or study end. We estimated exposures at residential addresses from different exposure domains: air pollution (nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)), particulate matter < 2.5 mum (PM(2.5)), black carbon (BC), ozone), built environment (green/blue spaces, impervious surfaces) and meteorology (seasonal mean and standard deviation of temperatures). Associations between environmental exposures and stroke were estimated in single and multiple-exposure Cox proportional hazard models, and Principal Component (PC) Analyses derived prototypes for specific exposures domains. We carried out random effects meta-analyses by cohort type. RESULTS: In over 15 million participants, increased levels of NO(2) and BC were associated with increased higher stroke incidence in both cohort types. Increased Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) was associated with a lower stroke incidence in both cohort types, whereas an increase in impervious surface was associated with an increase in stroke incidence. The first PC of the air pollution domain (PM(2.5), NO(2) and BC) was associated with an increase in stroke incidence. For the built environment, higher levels of NDVI and lower levels of impervious surfaces were associated with a protective effect [%change in HR per 1 unit = -2.0 (95 %CI, -5.9;2.0) and -1.1(95 %CI, -2.0; -0.3) for traditional adult and administrative cohorts, respectively]. No clear patterns were observed for distance to blue spaces or temperature parameters. CONCLUSIONS: We observed increased HRs for stroke with exposure to PM(2.5), NO(2) and BC, lower levels of greenness and higher impervious surface in single and combined exposure models.
Faculties and Departments:09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH)
09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH) > Department of Epidemiology and Public Health (EPH) > Environmental Exposures and Health Systems Research > Environmental Exposure Modelling (Vienneau)
UniBasel Contributors:de Hoogh, Kees
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
ISSN:0160-4120
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Language:English
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Last Modified:24 Oct 2023 08:46
Deposited On:24 Oct 2023 08:46

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