Science Inventory

EFFECTS OF LONG-TERM EXPOSURE TO TRAFFIC-DERIVED PARTICLES AND GASES ON SUBCLINICAL MEASURES OF CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE IN A MULTI-ETHNIC COHORT

Impact/Purpose:

Exposure to air pollution, especially particulate matter (PM), is consistently linked to cardiovascular disease (CVD) in epidemiological studies. Larger effects of long-term PM exposure are seen with improved exposure estimates. Traffic is a major source of air pollution and an important contributor to CVD; integrating refined traffic exposures into an epidemiologic study of air pollution and CVD would be an important advance. The primary objective of this project is to estimate the effect of individual-level exposure to traffic-derived air pollution on measures of CVD in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and Air Pollution (MESA Air) using novel exposure estimation methods and incorporating on-road, in-transit exposure estimates.

Description:

This project will transform MESA Air from its current focus on PM2.5 into a multi-pollutant study that can meaningfully investigate the impact of traffic-derived air pollution on cardiovascular health using a source-to-exposure approach. We will integrate data on traffic-derived pollutants from the novel, state-of-the-art mobile monitoring campaign (Project 1) into a multi-pollutant exposure model that incorporates participant-specific time-location information. The relationship between traffic exposure and change in measures of CVD will be assessed in a large and well-characterized cohort, making this project the first application of a multi-pollutant approach to a large-scale air pollution epidemiology study. Results will, in turn, assist policymakers in taking a multi-pollutant approach to controlling adverse health impacts of air pollution exposure.

Record Details:

Record Type:PROJECT( ABSTRACT )
Start Date:12/01/2010
Completion Date:11/30/2015
Record ID: 248944