The impact of air pollution on the incidence of diabetes and survival among prevalent diabetes cases

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2019.105333

Language of the publication
English
Date
2019-11-24
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Paul, Lauren A.
  • Burnett, Richard T.
  • Kwong, Jeffrey C.
  • Hystad, Perry
  • van Donkelaar, Aaron
  • Bai, Li
  • Goldberg, Mark S.
  • Lavigne, Eric
  • Copes, Ray
  • Martin, Randall V.
  • Kopp, Alexander
  • Chen, Hong
Publisher
Elsevier

Abstract

Purpose Growing evidence implicates ambient air pollutants in the development of major chronic diseases and premature mortality. However, epidemiologic evidence linking air pollution to diabetes remains inconclusive. This study sought to determine the relationships between selected air pollutants (nitrogen dioxide [NO2], fine particulate matter [PM2.5], ozone [O3], and oxidant capacity [Ox; the redox-weighted average of O3 and NO2]) and the incidence of diabetes, as well as the risk of cardiovascular or diabetes mortality among individuals with prevalent diabetes. Research Design and Methods We followed two cohorts, which included 4.8 million Ontario adults free of diabetes and 452,590 Ontario adults with prevalent diabetes, from 2001 to 2015. Area-level air pollution exposures were assigned to subjects’ residential areas, and outcomes were ascertained using health administrative data with validated algorithms. We estimated hazard ratios for the association between each air pollutant and outcome using Cox proportional hazards models, and modelled the shape of the concentration-response relationships. Results Over the study period, 790,461 individuals were diagnosed with diabetes. Among those with prevalent diabetes, 26,653 died from diabetes and 64,773 died from cardiovascular diseases. For incident diabetes, each IQR increase in NO2 had a hazard ratio of 1.04 (95% CI: 1.03–1.05). This relationship was relatively robust to all sensitivity analyses considered, and exhibited a near-linear shape. There were also positive associations between incident diabetes and PM2.5, O3, and Ox, but these estimates were somewhat sensitive to different models considered. Among those with prevalent diabetes, almost all pollutants were associated with increased diabetes and cardiovascular mortality risk. The strongest association was observed between diabetes mortality and exposure to NO2 (HR = 1.08, 95% CI: 1.02–1.13). Conclusions Selected air pollutants, especially NO2, were linked to an increased risk of incident diabetes, as well as risk of cardiovascular or diabetes mortality among persons with prevalent diabetes. As NO2 is frequently used as a proxy for road traffic exposures, this result may indicate that traffic-related air pollution has the strongest effect on diabetes etiology and survival after diabetes development.

Plain language summary

"Under the Federal Clean Air Regulatory Agenda (CARA), Health Canada conducts scientific research to evaluate the health risks of ambient air pollution. Growing evidence implicates ambient air pollutants in the development of major chronic diseases and premature mortality. However, epidemiologic evidence linking air pollution to diabetes remains inconclusive. Health Canada led a large cohort study in collaboration with researchers from other organizations to investigate the associations between air pollution and incidence of diabetes as well as the risk of cardiovascular or diabetes mortality among individuals with prevalent diabetes. In this study, two population-based cohorts comprising 4.8 million long-term Ontario residents free of diabetes and 452,590 Ontario adults with prevalent diabetes were followed in 2001-2015. The occurrence of diabetes and mortality outcomes was established from data linkage to population-based disease registries in the province. Increased risk for diabetes was found in association with nitrogen dioxide (NO2), with a 4% higher risk of developing diabetes after adjusting for various covariates. Among persons with prevalent diabetes, almost all pollutants (fine particulate matter, NO2, and ozone) were associated with increased mortality risk. The strongest association was observed between diabetes mortality and exposure to NO2 with an 8% increase in mortality. These results suggest that long-term exposure air pollution, even at the relatively low concentrations typically seen in Ontario, was linked to the development of diabetes and post-diabetes survival."

Subject

  • Health,
  • Health and safety

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Healthy environments, consumer safety and consumer products

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