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Workplace Pollution and Risk of Incident Coronary Artery Disease

Title: Workplace Pollution and Risk of Incident Coronary Artery Disease
Authors: Gao,Hua; Jarr,Kai-Uwe; Kojima,Yoko; Xiong,Ting; Kim,Juyong Brian; Cheng,Paul; Trasande,Leonardo; Peters,Annette; Pasterkamp, Gerard; Giannarelli,Chiara; Leeper,Nicholas J; Centraal Diagnostisch Laboratorium; Programmabureau Zorg van Morgen; Circulatory Health
Publisher Information: medRxiv
Publication Year: 2026
Subject Terms: Journal Article
Description: IMPORTANCE: Genetic factors only explain ~50% of an individual's lifetime CAD risk. Workplace pollution exposure likely represents a significant, under-recognized, and modifiable contributor. Clarifying its independent effect - distinct from residential air pollution - could inform targeted prevention, clinical risk assessment, and policy strategies. OBJECTIVE: To quantify the independent association between workplace pollution exposure and incident CAD, rigorously adjusting for canonical risk factors, genetic risk, socioeconomic deprivation index, and residential air pollution. DESIGN SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: A prospective cohort analysis of 103,599 adults in the UK Biobank with complete baseline employment history and specialized workplace environment surveys. Participants with prior CAD, or missing genetic information, canonical risk factor data, or residential air pollution measurements, were excluded. EXPOSURE: Cumulative, self-reported duration of exposure to workplace pollutants (including dust, smoke, exhaust, chemicals, asbestos, paints, and pesticides), summarized as a percentile measure. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Incident CAD. Associations were estimated using Cox proportional hazards models adjusted for demographics, comorbidities, CAD polygenic risk score, and residential air pollution metrics, accounting for competing death events. RESULTS: The cohort (median age 64 years; 43% male) had high baseline prevalence of smoking (41%) and co-morbidities (hypertension 27%, hyperlipidemia 16%, diabetes 4.3%). Common exposures included smoke (56%), dust (39%), and chemicals (27%). Over a median 7.5-year follow-up, 4,327 CAD cases occurred. Compared to the low exposure group, high workplace pollution exposures showed a stronger unadjusted association with CAD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.51; 95% CI, 1.40-1.63) relative to residential air pollution (unadjusted HR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.14-1.33). Importantly, in multivariable models, workplace pollution remained independently associated with higher CAD incidence ...
Document Type: other/unknown material
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/469704
Availability: https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/469704
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
Accession Number: edsbas.C92304D4
Database: BASE