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Outdoor air pollution exposure and cognitive performance: findings from the enrolment phase of the CONSTANCES cohort

Title: Outdoor air pollution exposure and cognitive performance: findings from the enrolment phase of the CONSTANCES cohort
Authors: Sakhvidi, M. J. Z.; Yang, J.; Lequy, E.; Chen, J.; de Hoogh, K.; Letellier, N.; Mortamais, M.; Ozguler, A.; Vienneau, D.; Zins, M.; Goldberg, M.; Berr, C.; Jacquemin, B.
Publication Year: 2022
Collection: University of Basel: edoc
Description: Background Air pollution exposure is one of the modifiable risk factors of cognitive decline. We aimed to test the association between exposure to several outdoor air pollutants and domain-specific cognitive performance. Methods In this cross-sectional study, we used data from the enrolment phase of the French CONSTANCES cohort. From the 220 000 people (aged 18-69 years) randomly recruited in the French CONSTANCES cohort, participants aged 45 years old or older (104 733 people) underwent a comprehensive cognitive assessment (verbal episodic memory, language skills, and executive functions). After exclusion of those who were not suitable for our analysis, 61 462 participants with available data were included in the analyses. We used annual mean concentrations at residential addresses, derived from land-use regression models, to assign exposure to particulate matter with aerodynamic diameters less than 2·5 μm (PM2·5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and black carbon. We used multiple linear regression models with different covariate adjustments to test the associations between each pollutant and cognitive outcomes. We did several sensitivity analyses, including multilevel modelling, meta-analysis by centre of recruitment, and exclusion of specific population groups. Findings We found significantly poorer cognitive function, especially on semantic fluency and domains of executive functions, with an increase in exposure to black carbon and NO2. Exposure to PM2·5 was mainly significant for the semantic fluency test. We found that decrease in cognitive performance with an increase of one interquartile range of exposure ranged from 1% to nearly 5%. The largest effect size (percentage decrease) for both PM2.5 and NO2 was found for the semantic fluency test (PM2.5 4·6%, 95% CI 2·1-6·9 and NO2 3·8%, 1·9-5·7), whereas for black carbon, the largest effect size was found for the digit symbol substitution test of the domains of executive functions (4·5%, 2·7-6·3). Monotonic and linear exposure-response associations were found between ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: https://edoc.unibas.ch/90807/1/20221201111618_63887ef2e120e.pdf; Sakhvidi, M. J. Z. and Yang, J. and Lequy, E. and Chen, J. and de Hoogh, K. and Letellier, N. and Mortamais, M. and Ozguler, A. and Vienneau, D. and Zins, M. and Goldberg, M. and Berr, C. and Jacquemin, B. (2022) Outdoor air pollution exposure and cognitive performance: findings from the enrolment phase of the CONSTANCES cohort. Lancet Planet Health, 6 (3). e219-e229.; info:pmid/35278388
Availability: https://edoc.unibas.ch/90807/; https://edoc.unibas.ch/90807/1/20221201111618_63887ef2e120e.pdf
Rights: cc_by_nc_nd ; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number: edsbas.89365340
Database: BASE