4.8 Article

Incident risk and burden of cardiovascular diseases attributable to long-term NO2 exposure in Chinese adults

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 178, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2023.108060

Keywords

Nitrogen dioxide; Cardiovascular incidence; Disease burden; Decomposition analysis; Air pollution; Cohort study

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This study provided nationwide cohort evidence for elevated risks of CVD incidence associated with long-term ambient NO2 exposure among Chinese adults, particularly in urban areas and among overweight/ obese individuals. Our findings highlighted that reducing NO2 exposure below 2021 WHO guideline could help prevent a substantial portion of incident CVD cases in China.
Background: A number of studies suggested a nexus between long-term exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and the incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), while population-based cohort evidence in low-and middle-income countries was extensively sparse.Methods: We carried out an 8-year longitudinal study (2010-2018) in a nationwide dynamic cohort of 36,948 Chinese adult participants, who were free of CVD at baseline. Annual average estimates of NO2 exposure were predicted using a well-validated spatiotemporal model and assigned to study participants based on their residential counties. Considering death as a competing risk event, Fine-Gray competing risk models with time-varying exposures at an annual scale were used to quantify incident risks of overall CVD, hypertension, and stroke associated with a 10-mu g/m3 rise in NO2 exposure. Using the meta-analysis approach, we performed a pooled analysis of hazard ratio (HR) drawn from this and prior multinational cohort studies for the assessment of attributable burden. NO2-attributable overall CVD incidents in China were evaluated by city and province for years 2010 and 2018, referring to a counterfactual exposure level of 10 mu g/m3 (2021 World Health Organization [WHO] air quality guidelines). A decomposition method was used to decompose net change in NO2-attributable CVD incidents during 2010 and 2018 into 3 primary contributions of driving factors (i.e., changes in NO2 exposure, population size, and incidence rate).Results: A total of 4428 overall CVD events (hypertension 2448, stroke 1044) occurred during a median follow-up period of 6.1 years. Annual mean NO2 concentration from 2010 to 2018 was 20.0 mu g/m3 (range: 6.9-57.4 mu g/ m3). An increase of 10-mu g/m3 in NO2 was associated with an HR of 1.558 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.477, 1.642) for overall CVD, 1.521 (95% CI: 1.419, 1.631) for hypertension, and 1.664 (95% CI: 1.485, 1.865) for stroke. Longitudinal associations of NO2 exposure with incident CVD were nearly linear over the exposure range, suggesting no discernible thresholds. Subgroup analyses indicated significantly higher NO2-associated risks of incident CVD among urban residents and overweight/obese individuals. According to pooled HR of NO2-CVD association (1.108, 95% CI: [1.007, 1.219]) from 10 multinational cohort studies, we estimated totally 1.44 million incident CVD cases attributable to NO2 exposure in 2018, representing a substantial decrease of 0.41 million compared to the estimate in 2010 (1.85 million) in mainland of China. Nationally, from 2010 to 2018, the attributable incident cases greatly dropped by 22.4%, which was dominantly driven by declined NO2 con-centration (-47.1%) that had offset far from the rise of CVD incidence rate (+19.6%) and population growth (+5.1%).Conclusions: This study provided nationwide cohort evidence for elevated risks of CVD incidence associated with long-term ambient NO2 exposure among Chinese adults, particularly in urban areas and among overweight/ obese individuals. Our findings highlighted that reducing NO2 exposure below 2021 WHO guideline could help prevent a substantial portion of incident CVD cases in China.

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