Short-term air pollution exposure and exacerbation events in mild to moderate COPD: a case-crossover study within the CanCOLD cohort
Bryan Ross, Dany Doiron, Andrea Benedetti, Shawn D. Aaron, Kenneth R. Chapman, Paul Hernandez, François Maltais, Darcy D. Marciniuk, et al. (13 authors)
Thorax · 2023-05
Abstract
Background Infections are considered as leading causes of acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Non-infectious risk factors such as short-term air pollution exposure may play a clinically important role. We sought to estimate the relationship between short-term air pollutant exposure and exacerbations in Canadian adults living with mild to moderate COPD. Methods In this case-crossover study, exacerbations (‘symptom based’: ≥48 hours of dyspnoea/sputum volume/purulence; ‘event based’: ‘symptom based’ plus requiring antibiotics/corticosteroids or healthcare use) were collected prospectively from 449 participants with spirometry-confirmed COPD within the Canadian Cohort Obstructive Lung Disease. Daily nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ), fine particulate matter (PM 2.5 ), ground-level ozone (O 3 ), composite of NO 2 and O 3 (O x ), mean temperature and relative humidity estimates were obtained from national databases. Time-stratified sampling of hazard and control periods on day ‘0’ (day-of-event) and Lags (‘−1’ to ‘−6’) were compared by fitting generalised estimating equation models. All data were dichotomised into ‘warm’ (May–October) and ‘cool’ (November–April) seasons. ORs and 95% CIs were estimated per IQR increase in pollutant concentrations. Results Increased warm season ambient concentration of NO 2 was associated with symptom-based exacerbations on Lag−3 (1.14 (1.01 to 1.29), per IQR), and increased cool season ambient PM 2.5 was associated with symptom-based exacerbations on Lag−1 (1.11 (1.03 to 1.20), per IQR). There was a negative association between warm season ambient O 3 and symptom-based events on Lag−3 (0.73 (0.52 to 1.00), per IQR). Conclusions Short-term ambient NO 2 and PM 2.5 exposure were associated with increased odds of exacerbations in Canadians with mild to moderate COPD, further heightening the awareness of non-infectious triggers of COPD exacerbations.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- COPD
- Exacerbation
- Spirometry
- Cohort
- Sputum
- Cohort study
- Hazard ratio
- Internal medicine
- Environmental health