1. Associations between air pollutants and acute exacerbation of drug-resistant tuberculosis: evidence from a prospective cohort study.
- Author
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Zhao, Chan-Na, Xu, Zhiwei, Wang, Peng, Liu, Jie, Wang, Rong, Pan, Hai-Feng, and Bao, Fangjin
- Subjects
AIR pollutants ,DISEASE exacerbation ,BURULI ulcer ,TUBERCULOSIS ,COHORT analysis ,AIR pollution - Abstract
Background: Short-term exposure to air pollution may trigger symptoms of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) through stimulating lung tissue, damaging tracheobronchial mucosa, the key anti-mycobacterium T cell immune function, and production and release of inflammatory cytokines. Objective: To investigate the association between acute exacerbations of DR-TB and short-term residential exposure to air pollutants (PM
10 , PM2.5 , SO2 , NO2 , CO and O3 ) based on a large prospective cohort in Anhui Province, China. Method: Patients were derived from a prospective cohort study of DR-TB in Anhui Province. All DR-TB patients underwent drug-susceptibility testing and prefecture-level reference laboratories confirmed their microbiologies. The case-crossover design was performed to evaluate the association between the risk of acute exacerbations of DR-TB and short-term residential exposure to air pollution. Results: Short-term NO2 exposure was significantly related to an elevated risk of first-time outpatient visit due to acute exacerbations of DR-TB(relative risk:1.159, 95% confidence interval:1.011 ~ 1.329). Stratification analyses revealed that the relationship between the risk of acute exacerbations and NO2 exposure was stronger in the elderly (age ≥ 65) DR-TB patients, and in individuals with a history of TB treatment. Conclusions: NO2 Exposure was significantly associated with an elevated risk of acute exacerbation of DR-TB in Anhui Province, China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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