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Association between changes in air pollution levels during the Beijing Olympics and biomarkers of inflammation and thrombosis in healthy young adults.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Rich, DQ; Kipen, HM; Huang, W; Wang, G; Wang, Y; Zhu, P; Ohman-Strickland, P; Hu, M; Philipp, C; Diehl, SR; Lu, S-E; Tong, J; Gong, J ...
Published in: JAMA
May 2012

Air pollution is a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVD), but the underlying biological mechanisms are not well understood.To determine whether markers related to CVD pathophysiological pathways (biomarkers for systemic inflammation and thrombosis, heart rate, and blood pressure) are sensitive to changes in air pollution.Using a quasi-experimental opportunity offered by greatly restricted air pollution emissions during the Beijing Olympics, we measured pollutants daily and the outcomes listed below in 125 healthy young adults before, during, and after the 2008 Olympics (June 2-October 30). We used linear mixed-effects models to estimate the improvement in outcome levels during the Olympics and the anticipated reversal of outcome levels after pollution controls ended to determine whether changes in outcome levels were associated with changes in pollutant concentrations.C-reactive protein (CRP), fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor, soluble CD40 ligand (sCD40L), soluble P-selectin (sCD62P) concentrations; white blood cell count (WBC); heart rate; and blood pressure.Concentrations of particulate and gaseous pollutants decreased substantially (-13% to -60%) from the pre-Olympic period to the during-Olympic period. Using 2-sided tests conducted at the .003 level, we observed statistically significant improvements in sCD62P levels by -34.0% (95% CI, -38.4% to -29.2%; P < .001) from a pre-Olympic mean of 6.29 ng/mL to a during-Olympic mean of 4.16 ng/mL and von Willebrand factor by -13.1% (95% CI, -18.6% to -7.5%; P < .001) from 106.4% to 92.6%. After adjustments for multiple comparisons, changes in the other outcomes were not statistically significant. In the post-Olympic period when pollutant concentrations increased, most outcomes approximated pre-Olympic levels, but only sCD62P and systolic blood pressure were significantly worsened from the during-Olympic period. The fraction of above-detection-limit values for CRP (percentage ≥ 0.3 mg/L) was reduced from 55% in the pre-Olympic period to 46% in the during-Olympic period and reduced further to 36% in the post-Olympic period. Interquartile range increases in pollutant concentrations were consistently associated with statistically significant increases in fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor, heart rate, sCD62P, and sCD40L concentrations.Changes in air pollution levels during the Beijing Olympics were associated with acute changes in biomarkers of inflammation and thrombosis and measures of cardiovascular physiology in healthy young persons. These findings are of uncertain clinical significance.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

JAMA

DOI

EISSN

1538-3598

ISSN

0098-7484

Publication Date

May 2012

Volume

307

Issue

19

Start / End Page

2068 / 2078

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Thrombosis
  • Sports
  • Male
  • Inflammation
  • Humans
  • Heart Rate
  • Health Status
  • General & Internal Medicine
  • Female
 

Citation

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Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Rich, D. Q., Kipen, H. M., Huang, W., Wang, G., Wang, Y., Zhu, P., … Zhang, J. J. (2012). Association between changes in air pollution levels during the Beijing Olympics and biomarkers of inflammation and thrombosis in healthy young adults. JAMA, 307(19), 2068–2078. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2012.3488
Rich, David Q., Howard M. Kipen, Wei Huang, Guangfa Wang, Yuedan Wang, Ping Zhu, Pamela Ohman-Strickland, et al. “Association between changes in air pollution levels during the Beijing Olympics and biomarkers of inflammation and thrombosis in healthy young adults.JAMA 307, no. 19 (May 2012): 2068–78. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2012.3488.
Rich, David Q., et al. “Association between changes in air pollution levels during the Beijing Olympics and biomarkers of inflammation and thrombosis in healthy young adults.JAMA, vol. 307, no. 19, May 2012, pp. 2068–78. Epmc, doi:10.1001/jama.2012.3488.
Rich DQ, Kipen HM, Huang W, Wang G, Wang Y, Zhu P, Ohman-Strickland P, Hu M, Philipp C, Diehl SR, Lu S-E, Tong J, Gong J, Thomas D, Zhu T, Zhang JJ. Association between changes in air pollution levels during the Beijing Olympics and biomarkers of inflammation and thrombosis in healthy young adults. JAMA. 2012 May;307(19):2068–2078.
Journal cover image

Published In

JAMA

DOI

EISSN

1538-3598

ISSN

0098-7484

Publication Date

May 2012

Volume

307

Issue

19

Start / End Page

2068 / 2078

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Thrombosis
  • Sports
  • Male
  • Inflammation
  • Humans
  • Heart Rate
  • Health Status
  • General & Internal Medicine
  • Female