101. Estimating the exposure-response relationships between particulate matter and mortality within the APHEA multicity project
- Author
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Antonis Analitis, Juha Pekkanen, Klea Katsouyanni, Joel Schwartz, Christian Schindler, Judith M. Vonk, Anna Páldy, Jordi Sunyer, Hugh Ross Anderson, Denis Zmirou, Evangelia Samoli, Pat Goodman, Giota Touloumi, Luigi Bisanti, Life Course Epidemiology (LCE), and Groningen Research Institute for Asthma and COPD (GRIAC)
- Subjects
exposure–response ,Urban Population ,Climate ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,air pollution ,Air pollution ,exposure-response ,medicine.disease_cause ,Risk Assessment ,AMBIENT PARTICLES ,DAILY DEATHS ,Statistics ,TIME-SERIES DATA ,medicine ,US CITIES ,Humans ,splines ,Particle Size ,Time series ,education ,METAANALYSIS ,Pollutant ,Air Pollutants ,education.field_of_study ,Research ,Generalized additive model ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Linear model ,Reproducibility of Results ,Articles ,Environmental Exposure ,Environmental exposure ,AIR-POLLUTION ,ASSOCIATION ,Particulates ,mortality ,Europe ,Environmental science ,GENERALIZED ADDITIVE-MODELS ,Public Health ,HEALTH ,heterogeneity ,hierarchical modeling ,REGRESSION SPLINES - Abstract
Several studies have reported significant health effects of air pollution even at low levels of air pollutants, but in most of theses studies linear nonthreshold relations were assumed. We investigated the exposure–response association between ambient particles and mortality in the 22 European\ud cities participating in the APHEA (Air Pollution and Health—A European Approach) project, which is the largest available European database. We estimated the exposure–response curves using regression spline models with two knots and then combined the individual city estimates of the spline to get an overall exposure–response relationship. To further explore the heterogeneity in the observed city-specific exposure–response associations, we investigated several city descriptive variables as\ud potential effect modifiers that could alter the shape of the curve. We conclude that the association between ambient particles and mortality in the cities included in the present analysis, and in the range of the pollutant common in all analyzed cities, could be adequately estimated using the linear model. Our results confirm those previously reported in Europe and the United States. The heterogeneity\ud found in the different city-specific relations reflects real effect modification, which can be explained partly by factors characterizing the air pollution mix, climate, and the health of the population.
- Published
- 2005