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. 2011 Nov;111(8):1222-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2011.08.004. Epub 2011 Aug 19.

Traffic density and stationary sources of air pollution associated with wheeze, asthma, and immunoglobulin E from birth to age 5 years among New York City children

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Traffic density and stationary sources of air pollution associated with wheeze, asthma, and immunoglobulin E from birth to age 5 years among New York City children

Molini M Patel et al. Environ Res. 2011 Nov.

Abstract

Exposures to ambient air traffic-related pollutants and their sources have been associated with respiratory and asthma morbidity in children. However, longitudinal investigation of the effects of traffic-related exposures during early childhood is limited. We examined associations of residential proximity and density of traffic and stationary sources of air pollution with wheeze, asthma, and immunoglobulin (Ig) E among New York City children between birth and age 5 years. Subjects included 593 Dominican and African American participants from the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health cohort. Prenatally, through age 5 years, residential and respiratory health data were collected every 3-6 months. At ages 2, 3, and 5 years, serum IgE was measured. Spatial data on the proximity and density of roadways and built environment were collected for a 250 m buffer around subjects' homes. Associations of wheeze, asthma, total IgE, and allergen-specific IgE with prenatal, earlier childhood, and concurrent exposures to air pollution sources were analyzed using generalized estimating equations or logistic regression. In repeated measures analyses, concurrent residential density of four-way intersections was associated significantly with wheeze (odds ratio: 1.26; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.01, 1.57). Age 1 exposures also were associated with wheeze at subsequent ages. Concurrent proximity to highway was associated more strongly with total IgE (ratio of the geometric mean levels: 1.25; 95% CI: 1.09, 1.42) than were prenatal or earlier childhood exposures. Positive associations also were observed between percent commercial building area and asthma, wheeze, and IgE and between proximity to stationary sources of air pollution and asthma. Longitudinal investigation suggests that among Dominican and African American children living in Northern Manhattan and South Bronx during ages 0-5 years, residence in neighborhoods with high density of traffic and industrial facilities may contribute to chronic respiratory morbidity, and concurrent, prenatal, and earlier childhood exposures may be important. These findings may have broad implications for other urban populations that commonly have high asthma prevalence and exposure to a high density of traffic and stationary air pollution sources.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure Statement The authors have no actual or potential financial or nonfinancial conflicts of interest to disclose.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Associations of GIS variables measured repeatedly between birth and age 5 years with concurrent wheeze and parental report of physician-diagnosed asthma. Data points and error bars describes the odds ratio and 95% CI, respectively, for the association of an interquartile range increase in the magnitude of the GIS variable with the presence of wheeze or diagnosis of asthma by a physician in previous 12 months, adjusted for sex, ethnicity, presence of smoker in the home, annual income, residential cockroach allergen concentration, residential mouse allergen concentration, age, and age by GIS variable interaction.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Associations of GIS variables measured repeatedly between ages 2 and 5 years with concurrent total IgE (log-transformed). Data points and error bars describe the ratio of the geometric means of total IgE and 95% CI, respectively, per an interquartile range increase in the magnitude of the GIS variable, adjusted for sex, ethnicity, presence of smoker in the home, annual income, residential cockroach allergen concentration, residential mouse allergen concentration, age, and age by GIS variable interaction.

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