Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution and metabolic syndrome in adults

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Abstract

Air pollutants (AP) play a role in subclinical inflammation, and are associated with cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is inflammatory and precedes cardiovascular morbidity and type 2 diabetes. Thus, a positive association between AP and MetS may be hypothesized. We explored this association, (taking into account, pathwayspecific MetS definitions), and its potential modifiers in Swiss adults. We studied 3769 participants of the Swiss Cohort Study on Air Pollution and Lung and Heart Diseases in Adults, reporting at least four-hour fasting time before venepuncture. AP exposures were 10-year mean residential PM 10 (particulate matter <10μm in diameter) and NO 2 (nitrogen dioxide). Outcomes included MetS defined by World Health Organization (MetS-W), International Diabetes Federation (MetS-I) and Adult Treatment Panel-III (MetS-A) using four- and eighthour fasting time limits. We also explored associations with individual components of MetS. We applied mixed logistic regression models to explore these associations. The prevalence of MetS-W, MetS-I and MetS-A were 10%, 22% and 18% respectively. Odds of MetS-W, MetS-I and MetS-A increased by 72% (51-102%), 31% (11-54%) and 18% (4-34%) per 10μg/m 3 increase in 10-year mean PM 10.We observed weaker associations with NO 2. Associations were stronger among physically-active, ever-smokers and non-diabetic participants especially with PM 10 (p<0.05). Associations remained robust across various sensitivity analyses including ten imputations of missing observations and exclusion of diabetes cases. The observed associations between AP exposure and MetS were sensitive to MetS definitions. Regarding the MetS components, we observed strongest associations with impaired fasting glycemia, and positive but weaker associations with hypertension and waist-circumference-based obesity. Cardio-metabolic effects of AP may be majorly driven by impairment of glucose homeostasis, and to a less-strong extent, visceral adiposity. Welldesigned prospective studies are needed to confirm these findings. Copyright:

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Eze, I. C., Schaffner, E., Foraster, M., Imboden, M., Von Eckardstein, A., Gerbase, M. W., … Probst-Hensch, N. (2015). Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution and metabolic syndrome in adults. PLoS ONE, 10(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130337

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