Nitrogen dioxide levels estimated from land use regression models several years apart and association with mortality in a large cohort study.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Land Use Regression models (LUR) are useful to estimate the spatial variability of air pollution in urban areas. Few studies
have evaluated the stability of spatial contrasts in outdoor nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) concentration over several years. We aimed
to compare measured and estimated NO₂ levels 12 years apart, the stability of the exposure estimates for members of a large
cohort study, and the association of the exposure estimates with natural mortality within the cohort.
METHODS
We measured NO₂ at 67 locations in Rome in 1995/96 and 78 sites in 2007, over three one-week-long periods. To develop LUR
models, several land-use and traffic variables were used. NO₂ concentration at each residential address was estimated for
a cohort of 684,000 adults. We used Cox regression to analyze the association between the two estimated exposures and mortality.
RESULTS
The mean NO₂ measured concentrations were 45.4 μg/m³ (SD 6.9) in 1995/96 and 44.6 μg/m³ (SD 11.0) in 2007, respectively. The
correlation of the two measurements was 0.79. The LUR models resulted in adjusted R2 of 0.737 and 0.704, respectively. The
correlation of the predicted exposure values for cohort members was 0.96. The association of each 10 μg/m³ increase in NO₂
with mortality was 6 % for 1995/96 and 4 % for 2007 LUR models. The increased risk per an inter-quartile range change was
identical (4 %, 95 % CI:3-6 %) for both estimates of NO₂.
CONCLUSIONS
Measured and predicted NO₂ values from LUR models, from samples collected 12 years apart, had good agreement, and the exposure
estimates were similarly associated with mortality in a large cohort study.
Links
Authors
Cesaroni G, Porta D, Badaloni C, Stafoggia M, Eeftens M, Meliefste K, Forastiere F
Institution
Department of Epidemiology, Lazio Regional Health Service, Via S, Costanza 53, 00198 Rome, Italy. g.cesaroni@deplazio.it
Source
Environmental health : a global access science source 11: 2012 pg 48MeSH
AgedAir Pollutants
Cohort Studies
Environmental Exposure
Environmental Monitoring
Female
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Middle Aged
Models, Biological
Nitrogen Dioxide
Prospective Studies
Regression Analysis
Rome
Seasons
Time Factors
Pub Type(s)
Evaluation StudiesJournal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22808928
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