Long-term exposure to air pollution and chronic kidney disease-associated mortality - results from the pooled cohort of the European multicentre ELAPSE-study

Publication date

2024-07-01

Authors

Kadelbach, Pauline
Weinmayr, Gudrun
Chen, JieISNI 0000000506355950
Jaensch Dipl-Dok, Andrea
Rodopoulou, Sophia
Strak, Maciej
Hoogh, Kees deISNI 0000000518044236
Andersen, Zorana J
Bellander, Tom
Brandt, Jørgen

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Despite the known link between air pollution and cause-specific mortality, its relation to chronic kidney disease (CKD)-associated mortality is understudied. Therefore, we investigated the association between long-term exposure to air pollution and CKD-related mortality in a large multicentre population-based European cohort. Cohort data were linked to local mortality registry data. CKD-death was defined as ICD10 codes N18-N19 or corresponding ICD9 codes. Mean annual exposure at participant's home address was determined with fine spatial resolution exposure models for nitrogen dioxide (NO 2), black carbon (BC), ozone (O 3), particulate matter ≤2.5μm (PM 2.5) and several elemental constituents of PM 2.5. Cox regression models were adjusted for age, sex, cohort, calendar year of recruitment, smoking status, marital status, employment status and neighbourhood mean income. Over a mean follow-up time of 20.4 years, 313 of 289 564 persons died from CKD. Associations were positive for PM 2.5 (hazard ratio (HR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) of 1.31 (1.03-1.66) per 5μg/m 3, BC (1.26 (1.03-1.53) per 0.5×10 - 5/m), NO 2 (1.13 (0.93-1.38) per 10μg/m 3) and inverse for O 3 (0.71 (0.54-0.93) per 10μg/m 3). Results were robust to further covariate adjustment. Exclusion of the largest sub-cohort contributing 226 cases, led to null associations. Among the elemental constituents, Cu, Fe, K, Ni, S and Zn, representing different sources including traffic, biomass and oil burning and secondary pollutants, were associated with CKD-related mortality. In conclusion, our results suggest an association between air pollution from different sources and CKD-related mortality.

Keywords

Air pollution, Chronic kidney disease, Long-term exposure, Mortality, PM, Particulate matter constituents, General Environmental Science, Biochemistry

Citation

Kadelbach, P, Weinmayr, G, Chen, J, Jaensch Dipl-Dok, A, Rodopoulou, S, Strak, M, de Hoogh, K, Andersen, Z J, Bellander, T, Brandt, J, Cesaroni, G, Fecht, D, Forastiere, P F, Gulliver, P J, Hertel, O, Hoffmann, B, Hvidtfeldt, U A, Katsouyanni, P K, Ketzel, M, Leander, K, Ljungman, P, Magnusson, P K E, Pershagen, G, Rizzuto, D, Samoli, E, Severi, G, Stafoggia, M, Tjønneland, P A, Vermeulen, R, Peters, A, Wolf, K, Raaschou-Nielsen, P O, Brunekreef, B, Hoek, G, Zitt, E & Nage, P G 2024, 'Long-term exposure to air pollution and chronic kidney disease-associated mortality - results from the pooled cohort of the European multicentre ELAPSE-study', Environmental Research, vol. 252, no. Pt 3, 118942. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2024.118942