Short term associations of ambient nitrogen dioxide with daily total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality: multilocation analysis in 398 cities

Abstract

Objective To evaluate the short term associations between nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality across multiple countries/regions worldwide, using a uniform analytical protocol.

Design Two stage, time series approach, with overdispersed generalised linear models and multilevel meta-analysis.

Setting 398 cities in 22 low to high income countries/regions.

Main outcome measures Daily deaths from total (62.8 million), cardiovascular (19.7 million), and respiratory (5.5 million) causes between 1973 and 2018.

Results On average, a 10 μg/m3 increase in NO2 concentration on lag 1 day (previous day) was associated with 0.46% (95% confidence interval 0.36% to 0.57%), 0.37% (0.22% to 0.51%), and 0.47% (0.21% to 0.72%) increases in total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality, respectively. These associations remained robust after adjusting for co-pollutants (particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤10 μm or ≤2.5 μm (PM10 and PM2.5, respectively), ozone, sulfur dioxide, and carbon monoxide). The pooled concentration-response curves for all three causes were almost linear without discernible thresholds. The proportion of deaths attributable to NO2 concentration above the counterfactual zero level was 1.23% (95% confidence interval 0.96% to 1.51%) across the 398 cities.

Conclusions This multilocation study provides key evidence on the independent and linear associations between short term exposure to NO2 and increased risk of total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality, suggesting that health benefits would be achieved by tightening the guidelines and regulatory limits of NO2.

Description
Keywords
carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, ozone, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, air pollutant, air quality, ambient air, Article, cardiovascular mortality, concentration (parameter), controlled study, environmental exposure, high income country, human, low income country, major clinical study, mortality rate, particulate matter, practice guideline, priority journal, respiratory tract disease, risk factor, time series analysis, adverse event, air pollution, cardiovascular disease, city, developing country, global health, mortality, respiratory tract disease, statistical model, toxicity, urban health, Air Pollutants, Air Pollution, Cardiovascular Diseases, Cities, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Environmental Exposure, Global Health, Humans, Linear Models, Nitrogen Dioxide, Respiratory Tract Diseases, Urban Health
Citation
Meng, X., Liu, C., Chen, R., Sera, F., Vicedo-Cabrera, A. M., Milojevic, A., et al. (2021). Short term associations of ambient nitrogen dioxide with daily total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality: multilocation analysis in 398 cities. 372. https://doi.org//10.1136/bmj.n534
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License
CC BY-NC 4.0 Unported