4.7 Article

Living in environmental justice areas worsens asthma severity and control: Differential interactions with disease duration, age at onset, and pollution

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DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2023.04.015

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Adult asthma; environmental justice; asthma onset; asthma disease duration; air pollution

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Living in an environmentally just tract increases the likelihood of severe and uncontrolled asthma, which is influenced by age at onset, disease duration, and traffic-related air pollution.
Background: Impoverished and historically marginalized communities often reside in areas with increased air pollution.Objective: We evaluated the association between environmental justice (EJ) track and asthma severity and control as modified by traffic-related air pollution (TRAP).Methods: We performed a retrospective study of 1526 adult asthma patients in Allegheny County, Pa, enrolled in an asthma registry during 2007-20. Asthma severity and control were determined using global guidelines. EJ tract designation was based on residency in census tracts with >= 30% non-White and/or >= 20% impoverished populations. TRAP exposures (NO2 and black carbon) for each census tract were normalized into pollution quartiles. Generalized linear model analyses determined the effect of EJ tract and TRAP on asthma.Results: TRAP exposure in the highest quartile range was more frequent among patients living in an EJ tract (66.4% vs 20.8%, P < .05). Living in an EJ tract increased the odds of severe asthma in later onset asthma. The odds of uncontrolled asthma increased with disease duration in all patients living in EJ tracts (P < .05). Living in the highest quartile of NO2 also increased the odds of uncontrolled asthma in patients with severe disease (P < .05), while there was no effect of TRAP on uncontrolled asthma in patients with less severe disease (P > .05).Conclusions: Living in an EJ tract increased the odds of severe and uncontrolled asthma and was influenced by age at onset, disease duration, and potentially by TRAP exposure. This study underscores the need to better understand the complex environmental interactions that affect lung health in groups that have been economically and/or socially marginalized.

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