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J Hao, Z Liu, B Hu, L A Tse, S Rangarajan, C Wang, Y Wang, W Liu, S Li, D Wang, S Yusuf, W Li, PURE-China Investigators, Interactive effects of outdoor fine particulate matter and metabolic, behavioural, and psychosocial risk factors on cardiovascular disease: analysis of the PURE-China cohort study, European Heart Journal, Volume 45, Issue Supplement_1, October 2024, ehae666.2941, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehae666.2941
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Abstract
Long-term PM2.5 exposure has been associated with an elevated risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and its associated risk factors.[1–4] There is a paucity of studies investigating the interactive effects of PM2.5 exposure and a comprehensive list of risk factors including metabolic, behavioural, and psychosocial risk factors on CVD risk.[5]
This study aims to examine the interactive effects of PM2.5 exposure and metabolic, behavioural, and psychosocial risk factors on incident CVD.
The Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE)-China cohort study is a population-based cohort study recruiting participants aged 35–70 years from 115 communities in 12 provinces of China between 2005 and 2009, and followed up until August 31, 2021.[6] Participants’ metabolic, behavioural, and psychosocial risk factor information was recorded. PM2.5 concentrations were extracted from a 1x1 km2 global model.[7,8] For this analysis, we included participants aged 35–70 years at baseline without a history of CVD, with at least one follow-up visit. The primary outcome was a composite of major cardiovascular events (CVD deaths, myocardial infarction, stroke, and heart failure). Additive interaction was measured by relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI), the proportion of disease attributable to interaction (AP), and the synergy index (SI).[9,10] To comply with the additive interaction method, we classified concentrations of PM2.5 into low and high levels by the median of 3-year average PM2.5 concentration (45.7 μg/m3, IQR: 33.7-74). Cox proportional hazard models were used to assess the associations of metabolic, behavioural, and psychosocial risk factors on incident CVD by PM2.5 concentrations.
The PURE-China study recruited 47 931 participants, of which 39 329 are eligible for this analysis. During the median follow-up period of 11.9 years (IQR: 9.6-12.6), 1462 and 2155 major CVD events had occurred in the low and high PM2.5 group respectively. There was a synergistic interaction between PM2.5 and the systolic blood pressure (SBP) for CVD: RERI: 0.363, 95% CI: 0.196-0.531; AP: 0.098, 95% CI: 0.081-0.115; SI: 1.155, 95% CI: 1.132-1.177; high LDL cholesterol: RERI: 0.219, 0.003-0.436; AP: 0.135, 0.008-0.263; SI: 1.549, 0.947-2.533. A significant synergistic interaction was also identified between PM2.5 and household air pollution (RERI: 0.457, 0.292-0.622; AP: 0.277, 0.184-0.37; SI: 3.362, 1.409-8.019). Interactions between PM2.5 and low grip strength on CVD were significantly synergistic, but antagonistic between PM2.5 and low physical activity (RERI: -0.248, -0.485--0.012; AP: -0.174, -0.349-0.001; SI: 0.633, 0.412-0.971).
Author notes
Funding Acknowledgements: Type of funding sources: Public hospital(s). Main funding source(s): Chinese National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, the Chinese National Clinical Research Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, Fuwai Hospital, the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences
- myocardial infarction
- physical activity
- cardiovascular diseases
- heart disease risk factors
- systolic blood pressure
- cerebrovascular accident
- ischemic stroke
- heart failure
- cholesterol
- environmental factors
- air pollution
- china
- follow-up
- behavior
- low density lipoprotein increased
- cardiovascular event
- follow-up visit
- community
- particulate matter
- grip strength
- cardiovascular disease prevention
- pure study
- primary outcome measure