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空气污染对 COVID-19 发病率、严重程度和死亡率的影响:欧洲和北美的研究系统评价。

The impact of air pollution on COVID-19 incidence, severity, and mortality: A systematic review of studies in Europe and North America.

机构信息

Department of Social and Political Sciences, Bocconi University, Milan, Lombardy, Italy; RFF-CMCC European Institute of Economics and the Environment, Centro Euro-Mediterraneo Sui Cambiamenti Climatici, Milan, Lombardy, Italy.

Research Unit for General Medicine and Primary Health Care, Faculty of Medicine, School of Health Science, University of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece.

出版信息

Environ Res. 2022 Dec;215(Pt 1):114155. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2022.114155. Epub 2022 Aug 27.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Air pollution is speculated to increase the risks of COVID-19 spread, severity, and mortality.

OBJECTIVES

We systematically reviewed studies investigating the relationship between air pollution and COVID-19 cases, non-fatal severity, and mortality in North America and Europe.

METHODS

We searched PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus for studies investigating the effects of harmful pollutants, including particulate matter with diameter ≤2.5 or 10 μm (PM or PM), ozone (O), nitrogen dioxide (NO), sulfur dioxide (SO) and carbon monoxide (CO), on COVID-19 cases, severity, and deaths in Europe and North America through to June 19, 2021. Articles were included if they quantitatively measured the relationship between exposure to air pollution and COVID-19 health outcomes.

RESULTS

From 2,482 articles screened, we included 116 studies reporting 355 separate pollutant-COVID-19 estimates. Approximately half of all evaluations on incidence were positive and significant associations (52.7%); for mortality the corresponding figure was similar (48.1%), while for non-fatal severity this figure was lower (41.2%). Longer-term exposure to pollutants appeared more likely to be positively associated with COVID-19 incidence (63.8%). PM, PM, O, NO, and CO were most strongly positively associated with COVID-19 incidence, while PM and NO with COVID-19 deaths. All studies were observational and most exhibited high risk of confounding and outcome measurement bias.

DISCUSSION

Air pollution may be associated with worse COVID-19 outcomes. Future research is needed to better test the air pollution-COVID-19 hypothesis, particularly using more robust study designs and COVID-19 measures that are less prone to measurement error and by considering co-pollutant interactions.

摘要

背景

空气污染被认为会增加 COVID-19 传播、严重程度和死亡率的风险。

目的

我们系统地综述了调查北美和欧洲地区空气污染与 COVID-19 病例、非致命严重程度和死亡率之间关系的研究。

方法

我们在 PubMed、Web of Science 和 Scopus 中搜索了截至 2021 年 6 月 19 日调查有害污染物(包括直径≤2.5 或 10 μm 的颗粒物(PM 或 PM)、臭氧(O)、二氧化氮(NO)、二氧化硫(SO)和一氧化碳(CO))对 COVID-19 病例、严重程度和死亡影响的研究。纳入的文章定量测量了暴露于空气污染与 COVID-19 健康结果之间的关系。

结果

从 2482 篇筛选出的文章中,我们纳入了 116 项研究,报告了 355 项单独的污染物-COVID-19 估计值。大约一半的发生率评估结果为阳性且具有显著相关性(52.7%);对于死亡率,相应的数字相似(48.1%),而非致命严重程度的数字则较低(41.2%)。长期暴露于污染物似乎更有可能与 COVID-19 发病率呈正相关(63.8%)。PM、PM、O、NO 和 CO 与 COVID-19 发病率的相关性最强,而 PM 和 NO 与 COVID-19 死亡率的相关性最强。所有研究均为观察性研究,大多数存在混杂因素和结局测量偏倚的高风险。

讨论

空气污染可能与更严重的 COVID-19 结果有关。需要进一步研究以更好地检验空气污染与 COVID-19 的假说,特别是使用更稳健的研究设计和不易出现测量误差的 COVID-19 措施,并考虑共同污染物的相互作用。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/886f/9420033/2468e2a43307/gr1_lrg.jpg

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