A Cohort Study of Traffic-Related Air Pollution and Mortality in Toronto, Ontario, Canada

作者:Jerrett Michael*; Finkelstein Murray M; Brook Jeffrey R; Arain M Altaf; Kanaroglou Palvos; Stieb Dave M; Gilbert Nicolas L; Verma Dave; Finkelstein Norm; Chapman Kenneth R; Sears Malcolm R
来源:Environmental Health Perspectives, 2009, 117(5): 772-777.
DOI:10.1289/ehp.11533

摘要

BACKGROUND: Chronic exposure to traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) may contribute to premature mortality, but few studies to date have addressed this topic. OBJECTIVES: In this study we assessed the association between TRAP and mortality in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. METHODS: We collected nitrogen dioxide samples over two seasons using duplicate two-sided Ogawa passive diffusion samplers at 143 locations across Toronto. We calibrated land use regressions to predict NO(2) exposure on a fine scale within Toronto. We used interpolations to predict levels of particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter <= 2.5 mu M (PM(2.5)) and ozone levels. We assigned predicted pollution exposures to 2,360 subjects from a respiratory clinic, and abstracted health data on these subjects from medical billings, lung function tests, and diagnoses by pulmonologists. We tracked mortality between 1992 and 2002. We used standard and multilevel Cox proportional hazard models to test associations between air pollution and mortality. RESULTS: After controlling for age, sex, lung function, obesity, smoking, and neighborhood deprivation, we observed a 17% increase in all-cause mortality and a 40% increase in circulatory mortality from an exposure contrast across the interquartile range of 4 ppb NO(2). We observed no significant associations with other pollutants. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to TRAP was significantly associated with increased all-cause and circulatory mortality in this cohort. A high prevalence of cardiopulmonary disease in the cohort probably limits inference of the findings to populations with a substantial proportion of susceptible individuals.

  • 出版日期2009-5