Long-term ambient concentrations of total suspended particulates and oxidants as related to incidence of chronic disease in California Seventh-Day Adventists.

Cancer incidence and mortality in a cohort of 6000 nonsmoking California Seventh-Day Adventists were monitored for a 6-year period, and relationships with long-term cumulative ambient air pollution were observed. Total suspended particulates (TSP) and ozone were measured in terms of numbers of hours in excess of several threshold levels corresponding to national standards as well as mean concentration. For all malignant neoplasms among females, risk increased with increasing exceedance frequencies of all thresholds of TSP except the lowest one, and those increased risks were highly statistically significant. For respiratory cancers, increased risk was associated with only one threshold of ozone, and this result was of borderline significance. Respiratory disease symptoms were assessed in 1977 and again in 1987 using the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute respiratory symptoms questionnaire on a subcohort of 3914 individuals. Multivariate analyses which adjusted for past and passive smoking and occupational exposures indicated statistically significantly (p less than 0.05) elevated relative risks ranging up to 1.7 for incidence of asthma, definite symptoms of airway obstructive disease, and chronic bronchitis with TSP in excess of all thresholds except the lowest one but not for any thresholds of ozone. A trend association (p = 0.056) was noted between the threshold of 10 pphm ozone and incidence of asthma. These results are presented within the context of standards setting for these constituents of air pollution.

[1]  J. Hodgkin,et al.  Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease symptom effects of long-term cumulative exposure to ambient levels of total oxidants and nitrogen dioxide in California Seventh-Day Adventist residents. , 1988, Archives of environmental health.

[2]  B. Ostro,et al.  A search for a threshold in the relationship of air pollution to mortality: a reanalysis of data on London winters. , 1984, Environmental health perspectives.

[3]  F. Massey,et al.  The UCLA population studies of chronic obstructive respiratory disease. 3. Comparison of pulmonary function in three communities exposed to photochemical oxidants, multiple primary pollutants, or minimal pollutants. , 1980, Chest.

[4]  W. L. Beeson,et al.  Chronic disease among seventh‐day adventists, a low‐risk group. Rationale, methodology, and description of the population , 1989, Cancer.

[5]  P. Stocks,et al.  Lung Cancer Death Rates among Non-Smokers and Pipe and Cigarette Smokers , 1955, British medical journal.

[6]  J. Vena Air pollution as a risk factor in lung cancer. , 1982, American journal of epidemiology.

[7]  L B Lave,et al.  Air pollution and human health. , 1977, Science.

[8]  W. Winkelstein,et al.  Stomach cancer. Positive association with suspended particulate air pollution. , 1969, Archives of environmental health.

[9]  J. Hodgkin,et al.  COPD prevalence in nonsmokers in high and low photochemical air pollution areas. , 1984, Chest.

[10]  J. Hodgkin,et al.  Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease symptom effects of long-term cumulative exposure to ambient levels of total suspended particulates and sulfur dioxide in California Seventh-Day Adventist residents. , 1987, Archives of environmental health.

[11]  J. Ware,et al.  Assessment of the health effects of atmospheric sulfur oxides and particulate matter: evidence from observational studies. , 1981, Environmental health perspectives.

[12]  L. Zeidberg,et al.  THE NASHVILLE AIR POLLUTION STUDY. III. MORBIDITY IN RELATION TO AIR POLLUTION. , 1964, American journal of public health and the nation's health.

[13]  W. Winkelstein,et al.  Prostatic cancer: relationship to suspended particulate air pollution. , 1969, American journal of public health and the nation's health.

[14]  C. A. Mills URBAN AIR POLLUTION AND RESPIRATORY DISEASES , 1943 .

[15]  L. Zeidberg,et al.  The Nashville Air Pollution Study. VI. Cardiovascular disease mortality in relation to air pollution. , 1967, Archives of environmental health.

[16]  W. Aronow,et al.  Effect of freeway travel on angina pectoris. , 1972, RN.

[17]  N. Breslow,et al.  Statistical methods in cancer research. Volume II--The design and analysis of cohort studies. , 1987, IARC scientific publications.

[18]  W W Holland,et al.  Health effects of particulate pollution: reappraising the evidence. , 1979, American journal of epidemiology.

[19]  E. Landau,et al.  The Nashville Air Pollution Study. VII. Mortality from cancer in relation to air pollution. , 1967, Archives of environmental health.

[20]  P E Shrout,et al.  The effects of measurement errors on some multivariate procedures. , 1977, American journal of public health.

[21]  S. I. Cohen,et al.  Carbon monoxide and survival from myocardial infarction. , 1969, Archives of environmental health.