Long-term exposure to low ambient air pollution concentrations and mortality among 28 million people: results from seven large European cohorts within the ELAPSE project

Jan 9, 2022The Lancet. Planetary health

Long-term exposure to low levels of air pollution and death rates in 28 million people across seven large European studies

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Abstract

Analysis of 28,153,138 participants revealed a significant association between long-term exposure to low-level air pollution and non-accidental mortality.

  • A hazard ratio (HR) of 1.053 was found per 5 μg/m³ increase in fine particulate matter, indicating a higher risk of non-accidental mortality.
  • Nitrogen dioxide and black carbon also showed positive associations with non-accidental mortality, with HRs of 1.044 per 10 μg/m³ and 1.039 per 0.5 × 10⁻⁶/m³, respectively.
  • Associations with air pollution were somewhat weaker for cardiovascular mortality but similar for non-malignant respiratory mortality and stronger for lung cancer mortality.
  • At concentrations below WHO air quality guideline values, the HR for non-accidental mortality was 1.078 per 5 μg/m³ for PM and 1.049 per 10 μg/m³ for NO.
  • The strongest association for black carbon exposure was noted below 1.5 × 10⁻⁶/m³, with a HR of 1.061.

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