Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
4245318 
Journal Article 
C-reactive protein (CRP) and long-term air pollution with a focus on ultrafine particles 
Pilz, V; Wolf, K; Breitner, S; Rückerl, R; Koenig, W; Rathmann, W; Cyrys, J; Peters, A; Schneider, A; KORA-Study group 
2018 
International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health
ISSN: 1438-4639
EISSN: 1618-131X 
Elsevier 
Germany 
221 
510-518 
English 
BACKGROUND: Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution contributes to the global burden of disease by particularly affecting cardiovascular (CV) causes of death. We investigated the association between particle number concentration (PNC), a marker for ultrafine particles, and other air pollutants and high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) as a potential link between air pollution and CV disease.

METHODS: We cross-sectionally analysed data from the second follow up (2013 and 2014) of the German KORA baseline survey which was conducted in 1999-2001. Residential long-term exposure to PNC and various other size fractions of particulate matter (PM10with size of <10 μm in aerodynamic diameter, PMcoarse2.5-10 μm or PM2.5 < 2.5 μm, respectively), soot (PM2.5abs: absorbance of PM2.5), nitrogen oxides (nitrogen dioxide NO2or oxides NOx, respectively) and ozone (O3) were estimated by land-use regression models. Associations between annual air pollution concentrations and hs-CRP were modeled in 2252 participants using linear regression models adjusted for several confounders. Potential effect-modifiers were examined by interaction terms and two-pollutant models were calculated for pollutants with Spearman inter-correlation <0.70.

RESULTS: Single pollutant models for PNC, PM10, PMcoarse, PM2.5abs, NO2and NOxshowed positive but non-significant associations with hs-CRP. For PNC, an interquartile range (2000 particles/cm3) increase was associated with a 3.6% (95% CI: -0.9%, 8.3%) increase in hs-CRP. A null association was found for PM2.5. Effect estimates were higher for women, non-obese participants, for participants without diabetes and without a history of cardiovascular disease whereas ex-smokers showed lower estimates compared to smokers or non-smokers. For O3, the dose-response function suggested a non-linear relationship. In two-pollutant models, adjustment for PM2.5strengthened the effect estimates for PNC and PM10(6.3% increase per 2000 particles/cm3[95% CI: 0.4%; 12.5%] and 7.3% per 16.5 μg/m3[95% CI: 0.4%; 14.8%], respectively).

CONCLUSION: This study adds to a scarce but growing body of literature showing associations between long-term exposure to ultrafine particles and hs-CRP, one of the most intensely studied blood biomarkers for cardiovascular health. Our results highlight the role of ultrafine particles within the complex mixture of ambient air pollution and their inflammatory potential. 
Air pollution; C-reactive protein; Inflammation; Long-term exposure; Particulate matter; Ultrafine particles 
International journal of hygiene and environmental health 
NAAQS
• ISA-Ozone (2020 Final Project Page)
     Literature Search Results
     Literature Search - Included
          Keyword Search
               Topic Classified Epidemiology
               Topic Classified Exposure
     Title-Abstract Screening (SWIFT-AS) - Included
          Title-Abstract Screening (SWIFT-AS) - Included
     Full-Text Screening Included
          Full-Text Screening Included
     Included in ISA First Draft
          Appendix 4
     Included in ISA Final Draft
          Appendix 4
• LitSearch-NOx (2024)
     Forward Citation Search
          Epidemiology
               Results
                    Cardiovascular-LT
                         PubMed
                         WoS
                    Reproductive
                         WoS
                    Respiratory-LT
                         PubMed
                         WoS
          Exposure
               Results
                    Error Sources
                         PubMed
                         WoS
     Keyword Search
          Epidemiology
               Respiratory
                    PubMed
                    WoS
               Cardiovascular
                    PubMed
                    WoS
               Mortality
                    PubMed
                    WoS
               Other Health Effects
                    WoS
                    PubMed
          Exposure
               Confounding
                    WoS
                    PubMed
               Error Impacts
                    WoS
                    PubMed
               PIA
                    WoS
                    PubMed
               Error Sources
                    WoS
     TIAB Screening
          Epidemiology
               Include
                    Respiratory
                    Cardiovascular
                    Repro
• Litsearch – PM ISA Supplement 2021
     Pubmed iCite citation search (April 2021 BR)
          PM2.5 Cardiovascular and Mortality Epi Search
               Results
          Merged search results (location and date exclusion applied)