Emulating causal dose-response relations between air pollutants and mortality in the Medicare population

被引:31
|
作者
Wei, Yaguang [1 ]
Yazdi, Mahdieh Danesh [1 ]
Di, Qian [2 ]
Requia, Weeberb J. [3 ]
Dominici, Francesca [4 ]
Zanobetti, Antonella [1 ]
Schwartz, Joel [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Landmark Ctr, Dept Environm Hlth, 4th West,401 Pk Dr, Boston, MA 02215 USA
[2] Tsinghua Univ, Vanke Sch Publ Hlth, Beijing, Peoples R China
[3] Fundacao Getulio Vargas, Sch Publ Policy & Govt, Brasilia, DF, Brazil
[4] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Biostat, Boston, MA USA
[5] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Boston, MA USA
基金
美国国家环境保护局; 美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Air pollution; Chronic exposures; Mortality; Causal modeling; Does-response relations; INVERSE PROBABILITY WEIGHTS; MARGINAL STRUCTURAL MODELS; TERM OZONE EXPOSURE; PROPENSITY SCORE; POLLUTION; ASSOCIATION; INFERENCE; DISEASE;
D O I
10.1186/s12940-021-00742-x
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Background Fine particulate matter (PM2.5), ozone (O-3), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) are major air pollutants that pose considerable threats to human health. However, what has been mostly missing in air pollution epidemiology is causal dose-response (D-R) relations between those exposures and mortality. Such causal D-R relations can provide profound implications in predicting health impact at a target level of air pollution concentration. Methods Using national Medicare cohort during 2000-2016, we simultaneously emulated causal D-R relations between chronic exposures to fine particulate matter (PM2.5), ozone (O-3), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and all-cause mortality. To relax the contentious assumptions of inverse probability weighting for continuous exposures, including distributional form of the exposure and heteroscedasticity, we proposed a decile binning approach which divided each exposure into ten equal-sized groups by deciles, treated the lowest decile group as reference, and estimated the effects for the other groups. Binning continuous exposures also makes the inverse probability weights robust against outliers. Results Assuming the causal framework was valid, we found that higher levels of PM2.5, O-3, and NO2 were causally associated with greater risk of mortality and that PM2.5 posed the greatest risk. For PM2.5, the relative risk (RR) of mortality monotonically increased from the 2nd (RR, 1.022; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.018-1.025) to the 10th decile group (RR, 1.207; 95% CI, 1.203-1.210); for O-3, the RR increased from the 2nd (RR, 1.050; 95% CI, 1.047-1.053) to the 9th decile group (RR, 1.107; 95% CI, 1.104-1.110); for NO2, the DR curve wiggled at low levels and started rising from the 6th (RR, 1.005; 95% CI, 1.002-1.018) till the highest decile group (RR, 1.024; 95% CI, 1.021-1.027). Conclusions This study provided more robust evidence of the causal relations between air pollution exposures and mortality. The emulated causal D-R relations provided significant implications for reviewing the national air quality standards, as they inferred the number of potential early deaths prevented if air pollutants were reduced to specific levels; for example, lowering each air pollutant concentration from the 70th to 60th percentiles would prevent 65,935 early deaths per year.
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页数:10
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