4.7 Article

Aerosol components associated with hospital mortality in systemic sclerosis: an analysis from a nationwide Thailand healthcare database

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-87114-0

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Funding

  1. Basic Research Fund of Khon Kaen University, Thailand

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This study found that aerosol components, particularly dust PM2.5 exposure, increased the risk of overall, cardio-pulmonary-renal, and cancer mortality among systemic sclerosis patients.
Occupational and environmental associations with systemic sclerosis (SSc) have been confirmed; however, the association between aerosol components and mortality is uncertain. The study aimed to define the association between aerosol components and hospital mortality among Thai SSc patients. A study was conducted using a national database of patients covered by the National Health Security Office, hospitalised between 2014 and 2018. Data included all patients over 18 having a primary diagnosis of SSc (ICD-10: M34). Spatial resources used map information based on GPS coordinates of Thailand. Aerosol components-including organic carbon, black carbon, dust particulate matter diameter<2.5 mu m (PM2.5), and sulfate-were assessed using the NASA satellite MERRA-2 Model M2TMNXFLX v5.12.4. Spatial modelling with R Package Integrated Nested Laplace Approximation (R-INLA) was used to analyse the association between the incidence of mortality and the 5-year accumulation of each aerosol component adjusted by age, sex, and comorbid diseases. The study included 2,094 SSc patients with 3,684 admissions. Most (63.8%) were female. During admission, 1,276 cases died. R-INLA analysis indicated an increase of 1 mu g/m(3) of dust PM2.5 was associated with a respective increase in the risk of overall mortality and death due to pneumonia of 96% and 79%. An increase of 1 mu g/m(3) of dust PM2.5 resulted in 1.17, 1.18, 1.64, and 2.15 times greater risk of mortality due to pulmonary fibrosis, cardiac involvement, renal involvement, and cancer, respectively. Aerosol components-particularly dust PM2.5 exposures-increased the risk of overall, cardio-pulmonary-renal, and cancer mortality among SSc patients.

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