Wolf, K. ; Stafoggia, M.* ; Cesaroni, G.* ; Andersen, Z.J.* ; Beelen, R.* ; Galassi, C.* ; Hennig, F.* ; Migliore, E.* ; Penell, J.* ; Ricceri, F.* ; Sørensen, M.* ; Turunen, A.W.* ; Hampel, R. ; Hoffmann, B.* ; Kälsch, H.* ; Laatikainen, T.* ; Pershagen, G.* ; Raaschou-Nielsen, O.* ; Sacerdote, C.* ; Vineis, P.* ; Badaloni, C.* ; Cyrys, J. ; de Hoogh, K.* ; Eriksen, K.T.* ; Jedynska, A.* ; Keuken, M.* ; Kooter, I.M.* ; Lanki, T.* ; Ranzi, A.* ; Sugiri, D.* ; Tsai, M.Y.* ; Wang, M.* ; Hoek, G.* ; Brunekreef, B.* ; Peters, A. ; Forastiere, F.*
     
 
    
        
Long-term exposure to particulate matter constituents and the incidence of coronary events in 11 European cohorts.
    
    
        
    
    
        
        Epidemiology 26, 565-574 (2015)
    
    
		
		
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			Open Access Gold möglich sobald Verlagsversion bei der ZB eingereicht worden ist.
		
     
    
		
		
			
				BACKGROUND: Long-term exposure to particulate matter (PM) has been associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality but little is known about the role of the chemical composition of PM. This study examined the association of residential long-term exposure to PM components with incident coronary events. METHODS: Eleven cohorts from Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, and Italy participated in this analysis. 5,157 incident coronary events were identified within 100,166 persons followed on average for 11.5 years. Long-term residential concentrations of PM < 10 μm (PM10), PM < 2.5 μm (PM2.5), and a priori selected constituents (copper, iron, nickel, potassium, silicon, sulfur, vanadium, and zinc) were estimated with land-use regression models. We used Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for a common set of confounders to estimate cohort-specific component effects with and without including PM mass, and random effects meta-analyses to pool cohort-specific results. RESULTS: A 100 ng/m³ increase in PM10 K and a 50 ng/m³ increase in PM2.5 K were associated with a 6% (hazard ratio and 95% confidence interval: 1.06 [1.01, 1.12]) and 18% (1.18 [1.06, 1.32]) increase in coronary events. Estimates for PM10 Si and PM2.5 Fe were also elevated. All other PM constituents indicated a positive association with coronary events. When additionally adjusting for PM mass, the estimates decreased except for K. CONCLUSIONS: This multicenter study of 11 European cohorts pointed to an association between long-term exposure to PM constituents and coronary events, especially for indicators of road dust.
			
			
				
			
		 
		
			
				
					
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        Publikationstyp
        Artikel: Journalartikel
    
 
    
        Dokumenttyp
        Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
    
 
    
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        Schlagwörter
        Use Regression-models; Air-pollution Exposure; Escape Project; Cardiovascular Mortality; Pm2.5 Absorbency; Metaanalysis; Association; Areas; No2; Stability
    
 
    
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        Sprache
        englisch
    
 
    
        Veröffentlichungsjahr
        2015
    
 
    
        Prepublished im Jahr 
        
    
 
    
        HGF-Berichtsjahr
        2015
    
 
    
    
        ISSN (print) / ISBN
        1044-3983
    
 
    
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        1531-5487
    
 
    
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	    Band: 26,  
	    Heft: 4,  
	    Seiten: 565-574 
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	    Supplement: ,  
	
    
 
  
        
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            Verlag
            Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
        
 
        
            Verlagsort
            Philadelphia
        
 
	
        
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        Begutachtungsstatus
        Peer reviewed
    
 
    
        Institut(e)
        Institute of Epidemiology (EPI)
    
 
    
        POF Topic(s)
        30202 - Environmental Health
    
 
    
        Forschungsfeld(er)
        Genetics and Epidemiology
    
 
    
        PSP-Element(e)
        G-504000-001
G-504000-004
    
 
    
        Förderungen
        
    
 
    
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        Erfassungsdatum
        2015-05-17