A case-crossover analysis of out-of-hospital coronary deaths and air pollution in Rome, Italy.
Forastiere. Francesco F; Stafoggia. Massimo M; Picciotto. Sally S; Bellander. Tom T; D'Ippoliti. Daniela D; Lanki. Timo T; von Klot. Stephanie S; Nyberg. Fredrik F; Paatero. Pentti P; Peters. Annette A; Pekkanen. Juha J; Sunyer. Jordi J; Perucci. Carlo A CA
Key Findings
- Higher daily concentrations of particle number (ultrafine particles), PM10, and CO were associated with a statistically significant increase in out‑of‑hospital coronary deaths.
- The strongest effect was observed on the same day as exposure, with a 7.6% rise in risk per interquartile range increase in particle number concentration.
- Older adults (65+) showed greater vulnerability, and the risk increase was seen regardless of specific comorbidities like hypertension or COPD.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and health‑optimizers, the direct takeaway is limited: the study does not provide a new protocol or supplement strategy. However, it reinforces the importance of minimizing exposure to air pollution—using high‑efficiency air filters, monitoring daily air quality, and avoiding outdoor activity on high‑pollution days—especially for older individuals or those with cardiovascular risk factors.
Summary
This study looked at people in Rome who died from heart attacks outside the hospital and found that higher levels of tiny particles in the air, larger dust particles, and carbon monoxide on the day they died were linked to a higher chance of death, especially for people over 65.
Abstract
Out-of-hospital coronary heart disease death is a major public health problem, but the association with air pollution is not well understood. We evaluated the association between daily ambient air pollution levels (particle number concentration [PNC]--a proxy for ultrafine particles [diameter < 0.1 microm], mass of particles with diameter less than 10 microm [PM10]; CO, NO2, and O3) and the occurrence of fatal, nonhospitalized coronary events. Subjects were 5,144 out-of-hospital fatalities (410-414, International Classification of Diseases-9; 1998-2000) who had been residents of Rome. Hospitalizations during the 3 yr before death were considered to identify comorbidities (e.g., diabetes, hypertension, heart failure, dysrhythmia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). Statistical analyses were performed using a case-crossover design. The association with out-of-hospital coronary deaths was statistically significant for PNC, PM10, and CO. Air pollution on the day of death had the strongest effect (e.g., 7.6% increase [95% confidence interval, 2.0-13.6%]) for an interquartile range of PNC, 27,790 particles/cm3. The 65-74- and 75+-yr age groups were at higher risk than the 35-64-yr age group, and there was a suggestion of effect modification for people with hypertension and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Air pollutants originating from combustion processes, including ultrafine particles, are related to fatal, nonhospitalized coronary events. The effect is stronger among people over 65 years of age, but is not limited to a group with a specific comorbidity.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-06-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.1164/rccm.200412-1726oc