Associations of long-term exposure to ambient PM(2.5) with mortality in Chinese adults: A pooled analysis of cohorts in the China-PAR project

长期暴露于环境PM2.5与中国成年人死亡率的关联:中国PAR项目队列的汇总分析

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The concentration-response relationship between mortality and long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM(2.5)) has not been fully elucidated, especially at high levels of PM(2.5) concentrations. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to evaluate chronic effects of ambient PM(2.5) exposure on deaths among Chinese adults in high-exposure settings. METHODS: Participants of the Prediction for Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease Risk in China (China-PAR) project were included from four prospective cohorts among Chinese adults aged ≥18 years old. The overall follow-up rate of the four cohorts was 93.4% until the recent follow-up survey that ended in 2015. The average of satellite-based PM(2.5) concentrations during 2000-2015 at 1-km spatial resolution was assigned to each participant according to individual residence addresses. Based on the pooled analysis of individual data from the four cohorts, a Cox proportional hazards model was used to estimate the hazard ratio (HR) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) for the association of PM(2.5) exposure with mortality after multivariate adjustment. RESULTS: A total of 116,821 participants were eligible in the final analysis. During a mean of 7.7 years of follow-up, 6,395 non-accidental deaths and 2,507 cardio-metabolic deaths occurred. The mean of PM(2.5) concentration was 64.9 μg/m(3) ranging from 31.2 μg/m(3) to 97.0 μg/m(3). For each 10 μg/m(3) increment in PM(2.5), the HR was 1.11 (95% CI: 1.08-1.14) for non-accidental mortality and 1.22 (95% CI: 1.16-1.27) for cardio-metabolic mortality. In addition, a weak exponential curve for the concentration-response association between mortality and PM(2.5) was observed among Chinese adults. CONCLUSIONS: Our study provided important evidence of the long-term effects of PM(2.5) exposure on deaths among Chinese adults. The findings expand our knowledge on concentration-response relationship in high-exposure environments, which is essential to address the urgent challenge of reducing the disease burden attributable to PM(2.5) exposure in rapidly industrializing countries such as China.

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