Association of air pollution with incidence of end-stage kidney disease in two large European cohorts

Giulia Cesaroni(ASL Roma), Andrea Jaensch(Universität Ulm), Matteo Renzi(ASL Roma), Claudia Marino(ASL Roma), Pietro Manuel Ferraro(University of Verona), Julia Kerschbaum(Innsbruck Medical University), P. Haller(Landeskrankenhaus Feldkirch), Wolfgang Brozek, Paola Michelozzi(ASL Roma), Massimo Stafoggia(ASL Roma), Kees de Hoogh(Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute), Bert Brunekreef(Utrecht University), Gerard Hoek(Utrecht University), Emanuel Zitt(Landeskrankenhaus Feldkirch), Francesco Forastiere(National Research Council), Gabriele Nagel(Universität Ulm), Gudrun Weinmayr(Universität Ulm)
The Science of The Total Environment
July 18, 2024
Cited by 5Open Access
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Abstract

End-stage kidney disease (ESKD) poses a high burden on patients and health systems. While numerous studies indicate an association between air pollution and chronic kidney disease, studies on ESKD are rare. We investigated the association of long-term exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO₂), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), black carbon (BC) and ozone (O3) with ESKD incidence in two large population-based European cohorts. We followed individuals in the Austrian Vorarlberg Health Monitoring and Promotion Program (VHM&PP) and the Italian Rome Longitudinal Study (RoLS) using dialysis and kidney transplant registries. Long-term exposure to pollutants was estimated at the home address using Europe-wide land use regression models at 100x100m scale. Hazard ratios (HR) were determined from Cox-proportional hazard models adjusted for individual and neighbourhood level confounders. We observed 501 events among 136,823 individuals in VHM&PP (mean age 42.1 years; crude incidence rate (IR) 0.14 per 1000 person-years) and 3231 events among 1,939,461 individuals in RoLS (mean age 52.4 years; IR 0.22 per 1000 person-years). In VHM&PP, there was no evidence of an association between PM2.5 or O3 and ESKD. There were elevated HRs but with large confidence intervals for BC (HR 1.17 [95 % confidence interval (CI): 0.98, 1.39] for 0.5*10−5/m), and for NO₂ (HR 1.14 [95%CI: 0.96, 1.35] for 10 μg/m3). In RoLS, ESKD was associated with PM2.5 (HR 1.37 [95 % CI: 1.06, 1.76] for an increase of 5 μg/m3), while there was no evidence of association with BC, NO2, or O3 exposure. Our study suggests an association of air pollution with ESKD incidence, which differed between the two cohorts and may possibly be influenced by respective air pollution mixtures.


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