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Long-Term
Ozone Exposure raises the risk of dying from
Lung Disease
Newswise — Long-term exposure to elevated
levels of ground ozone—a major constituent
of smog—significantly raises the risk of
dying from lung disease, according to a new
nationwide study of cities that evaluated
the impact of ozone on respiratory health
over an 18-year period.
The study found that the risk of dying from
respiratory disease is more than 30 percent
greater in metropolitan areas with the
highest ozone concentrations than in those
with the lowest ozone concentrations.
Over the last decade, several nationwide
studies have shown that long-term exposure
to tiny particles of dust and soot in air
pollution is a risk factor for death from
heart and lung disease.
However, it was unclear whether long-term
exposure to ozone, a widespread pollutant in
summertime haze, was linked to a higher risk
of dying from lung disease itself.
The new study, published in the March 12
issue of the New England Journal of
Medicine, is the first nationwide population
study on the long-term impact of ozone on
human health, and the first to separate
ozone’s effects from those of fine
particulate matter, the tiny particles of
pollutants emitted by factories, cars, and
power plants.
“Many studies have shown that a high-ozone
day leads to an increase in risk of acute
health effects the next day, for example,
asthma attacks and heart attacks,” says
George D. Thurston, Sc.D. who directed the
air pollution exposure assessment part of
the study.
“What this study says is that to protect the
public’s health, we can’t just reduce the
peaks, we must also reduce long-term,
cumulative exposure.” Dr. Thurston is a
professor in the Department of Environmental
Medicine at NYU School of Medicine, a part
of NYU Langone Medical Center.
Ozone in the upper atmosphere protects
against harmful ultraviolet (UV) radiation.
At ground level, ozone, or O3, forms when
nitrogen dioxide from tailpipes, coal-fired
power plants and other industries collides
with oxygen in the presence of sunlight.
Considered
a secondary pollutant because it takes time
to form, ozone tends to be higher in
concentration in suburbs and rural areas
downwind of cities.
Fine particulate matter, a primary
pollutant, is more prevalent at its source,
in the inner city, along roadways and in
industrial areas.
In concert with rising death rates from
respiratory disease, “background levels of
ozone have at least doubled since
pre-industrial-revolution times,” says
Michael Jerrett, Ph.D., associate professor,
Division of Environmental Health Sciences,
at the University of California, Berkeley,
and the lead author of the new study.
The study analyzed data on some 450,000
people who were followed from 1982 to 2000
as part of an American Cancer Society study.
Over that period 118,777 people in the study
died.
The data, which included cause of death,
were linked to air pollution levels in 96
cities using advanced statistical modeling
to control for individual risk factors, such
as age, smoking status, body mass, and diet,
as well as for regional differences among
the study populations.
By statistically controlling for the other
major component of smog—fine particulate
matter, particles smaller than 2.5
microns—the researchers were able to tease
out the cardiovascular impact of the
pollutants and still see ozone’s effects on
respiratory health.
Ozone data collected between 1977 and 2000
showed that California had both the city
with the highest and the city with the
lowest concentration of ozone pollution in
the country.
The researchers estimate that the risk of
dying from respiratory causes rises 4
percent for every 10 parts-per-billion
increase in exposure to ozone.
Based on that result, Dr. Thurston says the
city with the highest mean daily maximum
ozone concentration over the 18-year period
of the study, was Riverside (104 ppb).
This long-term cumulative exposure
corresponded to roughly a 50 percent
increased risk of dying from lung disease
compared to no exposure to the pollutant.
Los Angeles ran a close second, with an
estimated 43 percent increased risk.
Northeast cities were generally lower in
ozone than California. In Washington, DC,
and New York City, for example, the study
results indicate a 27 and 25 percent
increased risk of respiratory death, as a
result of their respective long-term ozone
exposures, says Dr. Thurston.
The estimated increased risk from cumulative
exposure in New York occurs even though New
Yorkers breathe air that is nearly in
compliance with the EPA's present short-term
ozone standard of 75 ppb, he says.
The lowest ozone concentration was seen in
San Francisco (33 ppb long-term average
daily maximum), which had an associated 14
percent increase in risk.
San
Francisco has low levels of ozone pollution
because fog regularly blankets the city,
which prevents the necessary photochemical
reaction from occurring, says Dr. Jerrett.
In addition, Dr. Thurston points out that
the Los Angeles area, which has high levels,
is located in a basin, which prevents the
rapid dispersal and dilution of air
pollution that occurs in San Francisco.
The EPA provides a list of counties in the
United States, their present ozone
concentrations, and their compliance status
with regard to the current short-term ozone
standard at the following URL: (click
here to go to list)
.
The present EPA air quality standards do not
protect against the long-term cumulative
effects of ozone exposures, but only address
the health effects of short-term daily peaks
in ozone exposure, says Dr. Thurston.
Currently, the Environmental Protection
Agency’s standard for short-term (8-hour)
ozone exposure is 75 parts per billion,
which exceeds the 60 ppb recommended by the
EPA’s own scientific advisory group, the
American Lung Association and more than a
dozen other public health organizations.
The EPA will be reviewing its ozone standard
in the coming year.
“How do we lower the burden of disease?”
queries Dr. Thurston.
“Do we look only at only those affected by
the highest days, or do we look at
everyone’s exposure over the entire year?
"Since
we all share the same air, paying attention
to cumulative exposure shifts the whole
exposure distribution for us all, and that’s
where the health payoff is. A small
reduction in everybody’s year-round risk
benefits us all.”
The other co-authors of this study are:
Kazuhiko Ito from the NYU School of
Medicine; Arden Pope from Brigham Young
University; Richard Burnett from Health
Canada, the federal health department based
in Ottawa; Daniel Krewski and Yuanli Shi
from University of Ottawa; Michael Thun and
the late Eugenia Calle from the American
Cancer Society in Atlanta.
About NYU Langone Medical Center
Located in the heart of New York City, NYU
Langone Medical Center is one of the
nation's premier centers of excellence in
health care, biomedical research, and
medical education.
For over 167 years, NYU physicians and
researchers have made countless
contributions to the practice and science of
health care. Today the Medical Center
consists of NYU School of Medicine,
including the Smilow Research Center, the
Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine,
and the Sackler Institute of Graduate
Biomedical Sciences; the three hospitals of
NYU Hospitals Center, Tisch Hospital, a
726-bed acute-care general hospital, Rusk
Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, the
first and largest facility of its kind, and
NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases, a leader in
musculoskeletal care; and such major
programs as the NYU Cancer Institute, the
NYU Child Study Center, and the Hassenfeld
Children's Center for Cancer and Blood
Disorders.
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