4.7 Article

Gaseous pollutants in particulate matter epidemiology: Confounders or surrogates?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
Volume 109, Issue 10, Pages 1053-1061

Publisher

US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
DOI: 10.2307/3454961

Keywords

air pollution; carbon monoxide; confounding; exposure error; personal exposure; PM2.5; nitrogen dioxide; ozone; sulfur dioxide

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Air pollution epidemiologic studies use ambient pollutant concentrations as surrogates of personal exposure. Strong correlations among numerous ambient pollutant concentrations, however, have made it difficult to determine the relative contribution of each pollutant to a given health outcome and have led to criticism that health effect estimates for particulate matter may be biased due to confounding. In the current study we used data collected from a multipollutant exposure study conducted in Baltimore, Maryland, during both the summer and winter to address the potential for confounding further. Twenty-four-hour personal exposures and corresponding ambient concentrations to fine particulate matter (PM2.5), ozone, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and carbon monoxide were measured for 56 subjects. Results from correlation and regression analyses showed that personal PM(2.)5 and gaseous air pollutant exposures were generally not correlated, as only 9 of the 178 individual-specific pairwise correlations were significant. Similarly, ambient concentrations were not associated with their corresponding personal exposures for any of the pollutants, except for PM2.5, which had significant associations during both seasons (p < 0.0001). Ambient gaseous concentrations were, however, strongly associated with personal PM2.5 exposures. The strongest associations were shown between ambient O-3 and personal PM2.5 (p < 0.0001 during both seasons). These results indicate that ambient PM2.5 concentrations are suitable surrogates for personal PM2.5 exposures and that ambient gaseous concentrations are surrogates, as opposed to confounders, of PM2.5. These findings suggest that the use of multiple pollutant models in epidemiologic studies of PM2.5 may not be suitable and that health effects attributed to the ambient gases may actually be a result of exposures to PM2.5.

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