A comprehensive review of European epidemiological studies on particulate matter exposure and health
Article 2011 en
Authors
EN
Eva Negri
SG
Silvano Gallus
PB
Paolo Boffetta
Abstract
1 min read
Ambient levels of several relevant pollutants are more variable within Europe than in the US, and are in several areas comparably high. Selected European cohort studies, including the Netherlands Cohort Study on Diet and Cancer and the European Prospective Investigation on Cancer and Nutrition study found some association between indicators of air pollution, e.g., PM10 or NO2 and lung cancer risk. However, the results were inconsistent and inadequate to address the health effects of exposure to PM2.5. A review cover the European epidemiological studies published between 1996 and 2006; studies investigating the effect of long-term exposure on cardiovascular disease; and cancer studies that provided proxies of particulate matter exposure (distance of the residence from a major road).
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