Landscape fire smoke enhances the association between fine particulate matter exposure and acute respiratory infection among children under 5 years of age: Findings of a case-crossover study for 48 low- and middle-income countries
Background
Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) produced by landscape fires is thought to be more toxic than that from non-fire sources. However, the effects of “fire-sourced” PM2.5 on acute respiratory infection (ARI) are unknown.
Methods
We combined Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data from 48 countries with gridded global estimates of PM2.5 concentrations from 2003 to 2014. The proportions of fire-sourced PM2.5 were assessed by a chemical transport model using a variety of PM2.5 source data. We tested for associations between ARI and short-term exposure to fire- and “non-fire-sourced” PM2.5 using a bidirectional case-crossover analysis. The robustness and homogeneity of the associations were examined by sensitivity analyses. We also established a nonlinear exposure–response relationship between fire- and non-fire-sourced PM2.5 and ARI using a two-dimensional spline function.
Results
The study included 36,432 children under 5 years who reported ARI symptoms. Each 1 µg/m3 increment of fire-sourced PM2.5 was associated with a 3.2 % (95 % confidence interval [CI] 0.2, 6.2) increment in the risk of ARI. This effect was comparable to that of each ∼5 µg/m3 increment in PM2.5 from non-fire sources (3.1 %; 95 % CI 2.4, 3.7). The association between ARI and total PM2.5 concentration was significantly mediated by the proportion of fire-sourced particles. Nonlinear analysis showed that the risk of ARI was increased by both fire- and non-fire-sourced PM2.5, but especially by the former.
Conclusions
PM2.5 produced by landscape fire was more strongly associated to ARI among children under 5 years than that from non-fire sources.
Funding
National Natural Science Foundation of China (42175182), PKU-Baidu Fund (2020BD031), and Ministry of Science and Technology of China (2022YFC3703000) for TX; the Energy Foundation (G-2208-34045, G-2107-33169 and R-2109-33379)
CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences (2017-I2M-1-004)
Leverhulme Centre for Wildfires, Environment and Society through the Leverhulme Trust (Grant RC-2018-023)
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Protection Research Unit in Environmental Exposures and Health, a partnership between the UK Health Security Agency, the Health and Safety Executive and the University of Leicester.
History
Author affiliation
National Institute for Health Protection Research Unit in Environmental Exposures and Health, University of LeicesterVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)