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Exposure to Elevated Nitrogen Dioxide Concentrations and Cardiac Remodeling in Patients With Dilated Cardiomyopathy

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posted on 2024-01-26, 10:24 authored by D Fecht, MARC CHADEAU-HYAM, RUTH OWEN, JOHN GREGSON, BP HALLIDAY, AS Lota, JOHN GULLIVER, JS WARE, DJ PENNELL, FJ KELLY, ASV SHAH, MR MILLER, DE NEWBY, SK PRASAD, U TAYAL
Background: Empirical evidence suggests a strong link between exposure to air pollution and heart failure incidence, hospitalizations, and mortality, but the biological basis of this remains unclear. We sought to determine the relationship between differential air pollution levels and changes in cardiac structure and function in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. Methods and Results: We undertook a prospective longitudinal observational cohort study of patients in England with dilated cardiomyopathy (enrollment 2009–2015, n = 716, 66% male, 85% Caucasian) and conducted cross sectional analysis at the time of study enrollment. Annual average air pollution exposure estimates for nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and particulate matter with diameter of 2.5 µm or less (PM2.5) at enrolment were assigned to each residential postcode (on average 12 households). The relationship between air pollution and cardiac morphology was assessed using linear regression modelling. Greater ambient exposure to NO2 was associated with higher indexed left ventricular (LV) mass (4.3 g/m2 increase per interquartile range increase in NO2, 95% confidence interval 1.9–7.0 g/m2) and lower LV ejection fraction (–1.5% decrease per interquartile range increase in NO2, 95% confidence interval –2.7% to –0.2%), independent of age, sex, socioeconomic status, and clinical covariates. The associations were robust to adjustment for smoking status and geographical clustering by postcode area. The effect of air pollution on LV mass was greatest in women. These effects were specific to NO2 exposure. Conclusions: Exposure to air pollution is associated with raised LV mass and lower LV ejection fraction, with the strongest effect in women. Although epidemiological associations between air pollution and heart failure have been established and supported by preclinical studies, our findings provide novel empirical evidence of cardiac remodeling and exposure to air pollution with important clinical and public health implications.

Funding

MRC Centre for Environment and Health

Medical Research Council

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Genomic dissection of inherited cardiomyopathies: identifying alleles, genes and mechanisms, for patient stratification.

Wellcome Trust

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British Heart Foundation (CH09/002, RG/10/9/28286, SP/15/8/31575, RE/18/5/34216)

Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award (WT103782AIA)

History

Author affiliation

Centre for Environmental Health and Sustainability & School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Cardiac Failure

Volume

28

Issue

6

Pagination

924-934

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

1071-9164

eissn

1532-8414

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2024-01-26

Language

eng

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