4.7 Article

Long-term exposure to ambient NO2 and adult mortality: A nationwide cohort study in China

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue -, Pages 13-22

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jare.2022.02.007

Keywords

Air pollution; Nitrogen dioxide; Adult mortality; Cohort study; Attributable deaths

Funding

  1. Youth Fund Project of Humanities and Social Sciences Research of the Ministry of Educa-tion
  2. [21YJCZH229]

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This study found that long-term exposure to ambient NO2 in Chinese adults is associated with an elevated risk of all-cause mortality. In 2018, approximately 1.65 million deaths in China were attributed to ambient NO2 exposure, representing a decrease compared to 2010.
Introduction: A number of population-based studies have investigated long-term effects of nitrogen diox-ide (NO2) on mortality, while great heterogeneities exist between studies. In highly populated countries in Asia, cohort evidence for NO2-mortality association was extensively sparse. Objectives: This study aimed to quantify longitudinal association of ambient NO2 exposure with all-cause mortality in Chinese adults.Methods: A national cohort of 30,843 adults were drawn from 25 provincial regions across mainland China, and followed up from 2010 through 2018. Participants' exposures to ambient air pollutants were assigned according to their residential counties at baseline, through deriving monthly estimates from high-quality gridded datasets developed by machine learning methods. Cox proportional hazards models with time-varying exposures were utilized to assess the association of all-cause mortality with long-term exposure to ambient NO2. NO2-attributable deaths in China were estimated by province and county for years 2010 and 2018, with reference to the counterfactual exposure of 6.9 lg/m3 (the lowest county-level average in this cohort). Results: We observed a total of 1662 deaths during 224020 person-years of follow-up (median 8.1 year). An approximately linear NO2-mortality relation (p = 0.273 for nonlinearity) was identified across a broad exposure range of 6.9-57.4 lg/m3. Per 10-mg/m3 increase in annual NO2 exposure was associated with an hazard ratio of 1.127 (95% confidence interval: 1.042-1.219, p = 0.003) for all-cause mortality. Risk estimates remained robust after additionally adjusting for the confounding effects of co-pollutants (i.e., PM2.5 or/and O3). In 2018, 1.65 million deaths could be attributed to ambient NO2 exposure (national average 17.3 mg/m3) in China, representing a decrease of 4.3% compared with the estimate of 1.72 million in 2010 (20.5 mg/m3). Conclusion: This cohort study provided national evidence for elevated risk of all-cause mortality associ- ated with long-term exposure to ambient NO2 in Chinese adults. (c) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Cairo University. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)

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