Five epidemiological studies on transport and asthma: Objectives, design and descriptive results

ZMIROU ; GAUVIN ; PIN ; MOMAS ; JUST ; SAHRAOUI ; LE MOULLEC ; BREMONT ; CASSADOU ; ALBERTINI ; CHIRON ; LABBE

Type de document
ARTICLE A COMITE DE LECTURE REPERTORIE DANS BDI (ACL)
Langue
anglais
Auteur
ZMIROU ; GAUVIN ; PIN ; MOMAS ; JUST ; SAHRAOUI ; LE MOULLEC ; BREMONT ; CASSADOU ; ALBERTINI ; CHIRON ; LABBE
Résumé / Abstract
A case-control study was conducted in five french metropolitan areas in order to assess the role of traffic-related air pollution in the occurrence of childhood asthma. This paper presents the study design and describes the distribution of key exposure variables. A set of 217 pairs of matched 4 to 14-year-old cases and controls were investigated (matching criteria: city. Age. And gender). Current and past environmental smoke exposures, indoor allergens or air pollution sources, and personal and family atopy were assessed by standard questionnaires. When possible, direct measurements were done to check the validity of this information, on current data: skin prick tests, urine cotinine, house dust mites densities personal exposures to, and home indoor concentrations of nox and pm2,5. Cumulative exposure to traffic-related pollutants was estimated through two indices: traffic density refers to a time-weighted average of the traffic density-to-road distance ratio for all home and school addresses of each child's life; air pollution index combines lifelong time-activity patterns and ambient air concentration estimates of nox using an air dispersion model of traffic exhausts. Average current pm2,5 personal exposure is 23.8 mg/m3 (sd=17.4), and average indoor concentrations = 22.5 mg/m3 (18.2); corresponding values for no2 are 31.4 (13.9) and 36.1 (21.4) mg/m3. Average lifelong calculated exposures to traffic- related nox emissions are 62.6 mg/m3 (43.1). The five cities show important contrasts of exposure to traffic pollutants. These data will allow comparison of lifelong exposures to indicators of traffic exhausts between cases and controls, including during early ages, while controlling for a host of known enhancers or precipitators of airway chronic inflammation and for possible confounders. Keywords: case-control study, childhood asthma, exposure to air pollution, traffic exhausts.
Source
Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology, num. vol12, P186-96 p.
Editeur
ISEA International Society of Exposure Analysis

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