Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Air Pollution in the Haifa Bay Area on Cardiovascular Morbidity and Mortality
The association between exposure to ambient air pollution and pulmonary disease has been
well established.To date no study has assessed the burden of cardiovascular disease in
Israel and its relation to ambient air pollution.
The Haifa Bay Area has a long history of industrialization including possessing the nation's
largest oil refineries, oil-fired power plant, agrochemical and cement producers, industrial
incinerators and the Eastern Mediterranean's busiest port. The presence of industrial and
mobile sources, combined with a basin effect has contributed to air pollution in the Haifa
Bay Area and has raised concerns about potential health effects.
Research Objectives
- Determine if the increased rate of cardiovascular mortality in Haifa is associated with
PM 2.5 concentrations.
- Assess effect modification in diverse sub-populations.
- If an association does exist, assess the economic burden of PM 2.5 associated
cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.
- Design prediction models of daily cardiovascular emergency department visits based on
daily and seasonal variation of air pollution.
The association between exposure to ambient air pollution and pulmonary disease has been
well established. Recent studies have attempted to investigate the effect of air pollution,
specifically exposure to PM 2.5, on cardiovascular outcomes. Acute exposure to PM 2.5 is
associated with increased heart rate, decreased heart rate variability, and increased
incidence of cardiac arrhythmia. Population based research from the United States and Europe
has demonstrated increased rates of emergency room visits, hospitalization and
cardiovascular morbidity in association with increased daily concentrations of fine
particulates.
To date no study has looked at the burden of cardiovascular disease in Israel and its
relation to ambient air pollution. Standardized mortality ratios due to cardiovascular
disease are significantly elevated in the Haifa Bay Area in comparison to the rest of the
country; mortality due to MI is 13% above national average while total ischemic heart
disease mortality is 29% above national average. The Haifa Bay Area has a long history of
industrialization including possessing the nation's largest oil refineries, oil-fired power
plant, agrochemical and cement producers, industrial incinerators and the Eastern
Mediterranean's busiest port. The presence of industrial and mobile sources, combined with a
basin effect has contributed to air pollution in the Haifa Bay Area and has raised concerns
about potential health effects.
Research Hypothesis- Fine particulate variation in the Haifa Bay Area is positively
associated with emergency room visit,hospitalization rates and mortality rates secondary to
cardiovascular disease.
Study Methodology- Critical to any environmental epidemiology research is coordination
between experts in exposure assessment and health outcomes. This study will be a two year
collaborative effort between the School of Public Health at the University of Haifa and the
Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Technion. Exposure measures will come
from the Haifa District Municipal Association for the Environment's (HDMAE) network of 15
monitoring stations in the region. HDMAE also monitors a number of meteorological covariates
(ie. maximum and minimum temperatures, mean humidity, and mean barometric pressure) which
will be incorporated into exposure modeling.
Primary outcomes of interest will be daily mortality rates and daily rates of cardiovascular
related emergency room visits and hospitalizations at the Rambam Medical Center in Haifa
Israel. Electronic medical record databases will be queried for ICD-9 codes of related
cardiac (acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, dysrhythmia/conduction disturbance)
diagnoses. A time-series analysis will be utilized to assess change in mortality and
emergency room visit rates in relation to incremental change in PM2.5. Covariates in the
model will include seasonal trends in disease incidence, daily concentration of
co-pollutants, meteorological variables such as temperature and humidity. Calculation of
relative risk will incorporate a 1 through 7 day lag into the model into to determine
latency of effect.
Contribution to Environmental Health in Israel- This research hopes to evaluate the
contribution of ambient air pollution on the increased rate of cardiovascular morbidity in
the Haifa Bay Area. In assessing effect modification in sub-groups we will contribute to the
understanding of how environmental pollution impacts Israel's diverse population. In
calculating the economic impact of associated morbidity and mortality we hope to contribute
to the cost-benefit analysis of environmental regulation in Israel. Finally, by creating
prediction models of daily cardiovascular emergency department visits based on air pollution
and meteorlogical variation, we can potentially inform local medical facilities and public
health agencies on how to predict and prepare for changes in disease incidence.
;
Observational Model: Case-Only, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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