Survey
of half-million Americans highlights harmful effects of toxic, aerosolized fine
particles
Newswise,
September 16, 2015 — In what is believed to be the largest, most detailed study
of its kind in the United States, scientists at NYU Langone Medical Center and
elsewhere have confirmed that tiny chemical particles in the air we breathe are
linked to an overall increase in risk of death.
The
researchers say this kind of air pollution involves particles so small they are
invisible to the human eye (at less than one ten-thousandth of an inch in
diameter, or no more than 2.5 micrometers across).
In
a report on the findings, published in the journalEnvironmental Health
Perspectives online Sept. 15, the scientists conclude that even
minuscule increases in the amount of these particles (by 10 micrograms per
cubic meter of air, for example) lead to an overall increased risk of death
from all causes by 3 percent — and roughly a 10 percent increase in risk of
death due to heart disease. For nonsmokers, the risk increase rises to 27
percent in cases of death due to respiratory disease.
“Our
data add to a growing body of evidence that particulate matter is really
harmful to health, increasing overall mortality, mostly deaths from
cardiovascular disease, as well as deaths from respiratory disease in
nonsmokers,” says lead study investigator and health epidemiologist George
Thurston, ScD, a professor of population health and environmental medicine at
NYU Langone.
“Our study is particularly notable because all the data used in
our analysis comes from government- and independently held sources.”
According
to Thurston, fine particles can contribute to the development of potentially
fatal heart and lung diseases because they slip past the body’s defenses and
can be absorbed deep into the lungs and bloodstream.
They are not sneezed or
coughed out the way larger natural particles, like airborne soil and sand, are
removed from the body’s airways. Moreover, Thurston says, fine particles are
usually made of harmful chemicals such as arsenic, selenium, and mercury, and
can also transport gaseous pollutants, including sulfur and nitrogen oxides, with
them into the lungs.
For
their research, Thurston and his colleagues evaluated data from a detailed
health and diet survey conducted by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and
the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP). The NIH-AARP study involved
566,000 male and female volunteers, ages 50 to 71, from California, Florida,
Louisiana, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and the metropolitan areas
of Atlanta and Detroit.
Analyzing
information gathered about the participants between 2000 and 2009, the
researchers calculated the death risk from exposure to particulate matter for
people in each national census district by cross-referencing information about
the amount and type of particulate matter from the Environmental Protection
Agency’s Air Quality System and other databases.
The investigators then
statistically ruled out other variables impacting health and longevity
including age, race or ethnicity, level of education, marital status, body
size, alcohol consumption, how much participants smoked or not, and
socio-economic factors such as median neighborhood income and how many people
in the neighborhood did not graduate from high school.
Indeed,
the team did not find any significant difference in the effect of particulate
matter exposure between different sexes or age groups or by level of education.
The researchers also noted that limiting the analysis to only the state of California, which has the most rigorous controls on air pollution, did not produce a different overall level of risk; instead, they found the same association between particulate matter exposure and increase in risk of death from all nonaccidental causes and from cardiovascular disease.
Senior
study investigator and health epidemiologist Richard B. Hayes, DDS, PhD, MPH, says
the team next plans to study which components of particulate matter are most
harmful and whether they come from auto exhaust, chemical plants, or
coal-burning power plants.
“We
need to better inform policymakers about the types and sources of particulate
pollution so they know where to focus regulations,” says Hayes, a professor of
population health and environmental medicine at NYU Langone.
“It is especially
important to continue monitoring health risks as national standards for air
pollution are strengthened.”
Funding
support for the study was provided by the National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences, a member of the National Institutes of Health. Corresponding
grant numbers are R01 ES019584, R21 ES021194, and P30 ES00260. Additional study
funding support was provided by NYU.
Thurston
has provided expert witness testimony about the human health effects of air
pollution before the U.S. Congress, in EPA public hearings, and has been paid
by environmental and conservation groups in legal cases. The terms of these
arrangements are being managed by NYU in accordance with its conflict of
interest policies.
In
addition to Thurston and Hayes, other NYU Langone investigators involved in the
study were Jiyoung Ahn, PhD; Kevin Cromar, PhD; Yongzhao Shao, PhD; Harmony
Reynolds, MD; Chris Lim, MS; and Ryan Shanley, PhD. Other collaborators
included Michael Jerrett, PhD, at the University of California Berkeley; and
Yikyung Park, ScD, at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.
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