Inquinamento atmosferico e mortalità in venticinque città italiane: risultati del progetto EpiAir2
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2013
abstract:
OBJECTIVES: this study aims at presenting
the results from the Italian EpiaAir2 Project
on the short-term effects of air pollution
on adult population (35+ years old)
in 25 Italian cities.
DESIGN: the short-term effects of air pollution
on resident people died in their
city were analysed adopting the time series
approach. The association between
increases in 10 ?g/m3 in PM10, PM2.5, NO2
and O3 air concentration and natural,
cardiac, cerebrovascular and respiratory
mortality was studied. City-specific Poisson
models were fitted to estimate the
association of daily concentrations of
pollutants with daily counts of deaths.
The analysis took into account temporal
and meteorological factors to control for
potential confounding effect. Pooled estimates
have been derived from randomeffects
meta-analysis, evaluating the
presence of heterogeneity in the cityspecific
results.
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: it was
analysed 422,723 deaths in the 25 cities
of the project among people aged 35
years or more, resident in each city during
the period 2006-2010.
MAIN OUTCOMES: daily counts of natural,
cardiac, cerebrovascular, and respiratory
mortality, obtained from the registries of
each city. Demographic information were
obtained by record linkage procedure
with the civil registry of each city.
RESULTS:mean number of deaths for natural
causes ranged from 513 in Rovigo to
20,959 in Rome.About 25% of deaths are
due to cardiac diseases, 10%to cerebrovascular
diseases, and 7% to respiratory diseases.
It was found an immediate effect of
PM10 on natural mortality (0.51%; 95%CI
0.16-0.86; lag 0-1).More relevant and prolonged
effects (lag 0-5) have been found for
PM2.5 (0.78%; 95%CI 0.12-1.46) and NO2
(1.10%; 95%CI 0.63-1.58). Increases in
cardiac mortality are associated with PM10
(0.93%; 95%CI 0.16-1.70) and PM2.5
(1.25%; 95%CI 0.17-2.34),while for respiratorymortality
exposure to NO2 has an important
role (1.67%; 95%CI 0.23-3.13; lag
2-5), as well as PM10 (1.41%; 95%CI -
0.23;+3.08). Results are strongly homogeneous
among cities, except for respiratory
mortality. No effect has been found for
cerebrovascular mortality and weak evidence
of association has been observed
between ozone and mortality.
CONCLUSIONS: a clear increase inmortality
associated to air pollutants was observed.
More important are the effects of NO2 (on
natural mortality), mostly associated with
traffic emissions, and of PM2.5 (on cardiac
and respiratorymortality).Nitrogen dioxide
shows an independent effect fromthe particulate
matter, as observed in the bi-pollutant
models.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Inquinamento atmosferico; mortalità naturale e causa-specifica; EpiAir2
List of contributors:
Vigotti, Mariangela; Santoro, Michele; Gianicolo, EMILIO ANTONIO LUCA
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