Comparison of air pollution exposure assessment methods and the association with children's respiratory health

Publication date

2025-04

Authors

Bouma, FISNI 0000000512509661
Hoek, GerardISNI 0000000394591966
Koppelman, Gerard H
Vonk, Judith M
Janssen, Nicole A.H.
van Ratingen, Sjoerd
Hendricx, Wouter
Wesseling, Joost
Kerckhoffs, JulesORCID 0000-0001-9065-6916ISNI 0000000492497930
Vermeulen, Roel C.H.ORCID 0000-0003-4082-8163ISNI 0000000396780074

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Epidemiological studies of the associations of long-term exposure to outdoor air pollution with asthma onset and lung function in children have used different exposure assessment methods. Little is known about how these different methods affect the magnitude of the effect estimates. The aim of this study was to compare associations of long-term air pollution exposures, estimated with different exposure assessment methods, with asthma incidence and lung function. METHODS: Eight exposure assessment methods, differing in modelling (dispersion, empirical) and monitoring strategy (fixed site, mobile), were applied to estimate annual average air pollution levels at the residential addresses of 3,687 participants of the Dutch PIAMA birth cohort. Associations of air pollution exposure with asthma and lung function were assessed and compared between methods. Heterogeneity in the associations was assessed with meta-analyses. RESULTS: Estimated exposure levels and contrasts differed substantially between methods. Exposure estimates from the different methods were moderately to highly correlated, with Pearson correlations ranging from 0.5 to 0.9. Higher air pollution levels were consistently associated with higher asthma incidence and lower FEV1. However, the magnitude of the association differed between methods (e.g. the ORs (95 % CI) for asthma incidence ranged from 1.09 (0.99; 1.21) to 2.56 (1.50; 4.36) for BC per 1 µg/m3 increment). CONCLUSION: Different air pollution exposure assessment methods resulted in consistent conclusions about the presence and direction of associations with asthma incidence and lung function in children, but associations differed in magnitude. Differences in exposure assessment methods may partially drive heterogeneity in associations between different studies.

Keywords

Air pollution, Asthma, Children, Lung function, Method comparison, General Environmental Science

Citation

Bouma, F, Hoek, G, Koppelman, G H, Vonk, J M, Janssen, N A, van Ratingen, S, Hendricx, W, Wesseling, J, Kerckhoffs, J, Vermeulen, R, de Hoogh, K & Gehring, U 2025, 'Comparison of air pollution exposure assessment methods and the association with children's respiratory health', Environment International, vol. 198, 109407. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2025.109407