Background and Aims: While many studies have reported associations of air pollution with hospital admissions, little is known about whether pre-event medical treatments modify those associations. Our study analyzed how pre-admission respiratory pharmacological treatments affect the relationship between PM10 and hospitalizations for respiratory diseases. Methods: Hospital admissions for respiratory causes (ICD-9-CM 460-466, 480-487, 491, 493, 5130 and 5188) during 2005 in the residents of six cities of Lombardy (Northern Italy), accounting for roughly 500.000 inhabitants, were selected. For each hospitalized subject we determined which respiratory treatment he/she was undergoing, using record linkage with pre-hospitalization medical prescriptions for respiratory drugs. Daily average concentration of PM10 and temperature were provided by the Regional Agency for Environmental Protection of Lombardy. We used a case-only approach to analyze the modification of the effect of PM10 on respiratory hospital admissions due to medical treatments. Separate models were fitted for systemic glucocorticoids, inhaled adrenergics, inhaled glucocorticoids, inhaled anticholinergics and theophylline. The models accounted for the simultaneous presence of different classes of respiratory treatments, long and short term confounding, heterogeneity among cities and effect of temperature. Results: We selected 4,248 hospital admissions with a respiratory diagnosis and 7,717 respiratory prescriptions, related to 3,604 subjects. Pre-admission respiratory therapy was present in 39% of the admissions. The observed modification of the effect of PM10 on respiratory hospitalizations was modest for all of the examined treatments. We observed a significant effect modification (results shown for a 10 μg/m3 increment in PM10 concentration) associated with the use of systemic glucocorticoids before the hospitalization (OR=0.929, 95% CI, 0.892 – 0.967), which persists during the cold season (OR=0.927, CI 95% 0.881 – 0.976). Conclusions: This pilot study, conducted on a reduced sample of the Northern Italian population, shows interesting evidences of a potential protective effect of systemic glucocorticoids against adverse respiratory consequences of exposure to PM10.
DE VITO, G., Conti, S., Lafranconi, A., Schwartz, J., Zanobetti, A., Fornari, C., et al. (2011). Case-only analysis of interaction between pre-hospitalization respiratory treatments and pm10 exposure. Results from administrative databases. In Abstracts from the 23th Congress of teh ISEE.
Case-only analysis of interaction between pre-hospitalization respiratory treatments and pm10 exposure. Results from administrative databases
DE VITO, GIOVANNI;CONTI, SARA;LAFRANCONI, ALESSANDRA;FORNARI, CARLA;MADOTTO, FABIANA;CESANA, GIANCARLO
2011
Abstract
Background and Aims: While many studies have reported associations of air pollution with hospital admissions, little is known about whether pre-event medical treatments modify those associations. Our study analyzed how pre-admission respiratory pharmacological treatments affect the relationship between PM10 and hospitalizations for respiratory diseases. Methods: Hospital admissions for respiratory causes (ICD-9-CM 460-466, 480-487, 491, 493, 5130 and 5188) during 2005 in the residents of six cities of Lombardy (Northern Italy), accounting for roughly 500.000 inhabitants, were selected. For each hospitalized subject we determined which respiratory treatment he/she was undergoing, using record linkage with pre-hospitalization medical prescriptions for respiratory drugs. Daily average concentration of PM10 and temperature were provided by the Regional Agency for Environmental Protection of Lombardy. We used a case-only approach to analyze the modification of the effect of PM10 on respiratory hospital admissions due to medical treatments. Separate models were fitted for systemic glucocorticoids, inhaled adrenergics, inhaled glucocorticoids, inhaled anticholinergics and theophylline. The models accounted for the simultaneous presence of different classes of respiratory treatments, long and short term confounding, heterogeneity among cities and effect of temperature. Results: We selected 4,248 hospital admissions with a respiratory diagnosis and 7,717 respiratory prescriptions, related to 3,604 subjects. Pre-admission respiratory therapy was present in 39% of the admissions. The observed modification of the effect of PM10 on respiratory hospitalizations was modest for all of the examined treatments. We observed a significant effect modification (results shown for a 10 μg/m3 increment in PM10 concentration) associated with the use of systemic glucocorticoids before the hospitalization (OR=0.929, 95% CI, 0.892 – 0.967), which persists during the cold season (OR=0.927, CI 95% 0.881 – 0.976). Conclusions: This pilot study, conducted on a reduced sample of the Northern Italian population, shows interesting evidences of a potential protective effect of systemic glucocorticoids against adverse respiratory consequences of exposure to PM10.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.