Estimates, trends, and drivers of the global burden of type 2 diabetes attributable to PM2.5 air pollution, 1990-2019: an analysis of data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019

Katrin Burkart,Aaron J. Cohen,Sarah S. Wozniak,Xiaochen Dai,Lalit Dandona,Rakhi Dandona,Simon Hay,Ali H. Mokdad,Stephen S. Lim,Jeffrey D. Stanaway,Michael Brauer,Samath Dhamminda Dharmaratne,Shane Douglas Morrison,Kate Causey,Devashri Digvijay Salvi,Cristiana Abbafati,Victor Adekanmbi,Jose C. Adsuar,Keivan Ahmadi,Azeem Majeed,Fares Alahdab,Ziyad Al-Aly,Vahid Alipour,Jalal Arabloo,Aziz Rezapour,Ebrahim Babaee,Arash Tehrani-Banihashemi,Amir Kasaeian,Fatemeh Pashazadeh Kan,Nelson Alvis-Guzman,Adeladza Kofi Amegah,Catalina Liliana Andrei,Ruxandra Irina Negoi,Tudorel Andrei,Andreea Mirica,Fereshteh Ansari,Olatunde Aremu,Timur Aripov,Maciej Banach,Anthony Barnett,Ester Cerin,Till Winfried Barnighausen,Aziz Sheikh,Neeraj Bedi,Masoud Behzadifar,Yannick Bejot,Derrick A. Bennett,Sonia Lewycka,Isabela M. Bensenor,Robert S. Bernstein,Krittika Bhattacharyya,Ali Bijani,Antonio Biondi,Marco Vacante,Somayeh Bohlouli,Susanne Breitner,Hermann Brenner,Zahid A. Butt,Luis Alberto Camera,Pascual R. Valdez,Carlos Cantu-Brito,Felix Carvalho,Eduarda Fernandes,Marisa Freitas,Daniela Ribeiro,Vijay Kumar Chattu, Bal Govind Chauhan,Junaid Khan,Jee-Young Jasmine Choi,Dinh-Toi Chu,Sanjay Zodpey,Ahmad Daryani,Alireza Rafiei,Kairat Davletov,Barbora de Courten,Sojib Bin Zaman,Yuming Guo,Shanshan Li,Feleke Mekonnen Demeke,Edgar Denova-Gutierrez,Meghnath Dhimal,Daniel Diaz,Shirin Djalalinia,Bruce B. Duncan,Maria Ines Schmidt,Maysaa El Sayed Zaki,Sharareh Eskandarieh,Mohammad Ali Sahraian,Farshad Farzadfar,Bahram Mohajer,Sahar Saeedi Moghaddam,Mehdi Fazlzadeh,Afshin Maleki,Reza Malekzadeh,Hamideh Salimzadeh,Sadaf G. Sepanlou,Fakher Rahim,Vafa Rahimi-Movaghar,Reza Shirkoohi,Mohammad Fareed, Nazir Fattahi,Meghdad Pirsaheb, Ehsan Sadeghi, Kiomars Sharafi,Irina Filip,Florian Fischer, Nataliya A. Foigt,Ahmad Ghashghaee,Paramjit Singh Gill, Ibrahim Abdelmageed Ginawi,Sameer Vali Gopalani, Rajat Das Gupta,Tesfa Dejenie Habtewold,Randah R. Hamadeh,Samer Hamidi,Graeme J. Hankey,Edris Hasanpoor,Hadi Pourjafar, Hamid Yimam Hassen,Behzad Heibati,Michael K. Hole, Naznin Hossain, Mowafa Househ, Seyed Sina Naghibi Irvani, Jalil Jaafari,Mihajlo Jakovljevic, Ravi Prakash Jha,Jost B. Jonas, Jacek Jerzy Jozwiak, Neda Kaydi,Morteza Abdullatif Khafaie,Yousef Saleh Khader,Ejaz Ahmad Khan, Md Nuruzzaman Khan, Khaled Khatab, Amir M. Khater,Yun Jin Kim, Ruth W. Kimokoti,Adnan Kisa,Mika Kivimaki,Luke D. Knibbs,Soewarta Kosen,Parvaiz A. Koul,Ai Koyanagi,Barthelemy Kuate Defo,Nuworza Kugbey,Paolo Lauriola,Paul H. Lee,Mostafa Leili,Lee-Ling Lim, Shai Linn, Kerem Shuval, Yong Liu,Stefan Lorkowski, Phetole Walter Mahasha,Duduzile Edith Ndwandwe,Narayan B. Mahotra,Abdullah A. Mamun,Navid Manafi,Santi Martini,Birhanu Geta Meharie,Yonatal Mesfin Tefera, Ritesh G. Menezes,Tomislav Mestrovic,Bartosz Miazgowski, Tomasz Miazgowski,Ted R. Miller, Gk Mini,Erkin M. Mirrakhimov, Shafiu Mohammed, Viswanathan Mohan,Lorenzo Monasta, Luca Ronfani,Paula Moraga, Ulrich Otto Mueller, Satinath Mukhopadhyay,Ghulam Mustafa,Saravanan Muthupandian,Gurudatta Naik,Vinay Nangia,Dina Nur Anggraini Ningrum,Jean Jacques Noubiap,Felix Akpojene Ogbo,Andrew T. Olagunju, Thirunavukkarasu Sathish,Obinna E. Onwujekwe,Alberto Ortiz,Mayowa O. Owolabi, M. P. A. Dnb,Songhomitra Panda-Jonas,Eun-Kee Park,Maarten J. Postma, Amir Radfar,Muhammad Aziz Rahman,Rajesh Kumar Rai,Chhabi Lal Ranabhat,Samira Raoofi,Lal Rawal,Andre M. N. Renzaho,Leonardo Roever,Siamak Sabour, Basema Saddik,Amirhossein Sahebkar,Sundeep Santosh Salvi, Abdallah M. Samy,Juan Sanabria,Rodrigo Sarmiento-Suarez,Aletta Elisabeth Schutte,Masood Ali Shaikh,Mika Shigematsu,Rahman Shiri, Ireneous N. Soyiri, Rafael Tabares-Seisdedos, Mohamad-Hani Temsah,Kavumpurathu Raman Thankappan,Roman Topor-Madry, Lorainne Tudor Car, Irfan Ullah,Tommi Juhani Vasankari,Francesco S. Violante, Yasir Waheed,Charles D. A. Wolfe,Tomohide Yamada,Naohiro Yonemoto,Chuanhua Yu,Yunquan Zhang

The Lancet. Planetary health(2022)

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摘要
Background Experimental and epidemiological studies indicate an association between exposure to particulate matter (PM) air pollution and increased risk of type 2 diabetes. In view of the high and increasing prevalence of diabetes, we aimed to quantify the burden of type 2 diabetes attributable to PM2.5 originating from ambient and household air pollution. Methods We systematically compiled all relevant cohort and case-control studies assessing the effect of exposure to household and ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) air pollution on type 2 diabetes incidence and mortality. We derived an exposure-response curve from the extracted relative risk estimates using the MR-BRT (meta-regression-Bayesian, regularised, trimmed) tool. The estimated curve was linked to ambient and household PM2.5 exposures from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2019, and estimates of the attributable burden (population attributable fractions and rates per 100 000 population of deaths and disability-adjusted life-years) for 204 countries from 1990 to 2019 were calculated. We also assessed the role of changes in exposure, population size, age, and type 2 diabetes incidence in the observed trend in PM2.5-attributable type 2 diabetes burden. All estimates are presented with 95% uncertainty intervals. Findings In 2019, approximately a fifth of the global burden of type 2 diabetes was attributable to PM2.5 exposure, with an estimated 3.78 (95% uncertainty interval 2.68-4.83) deaths per 100 000 population and 167 (117-223) disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) per 100 000 population. Approximately 13.4% (9.49-17.5) of deaths and 13.6% (9.73-17.9) of DALYs due to type 2 diabetes were contributed by ambient PM2.5, and 6.50% (4.22-9.53) of deaths and 5.92% (3.81-8.64) of DALYs by household air pollution. High burdens, in terms of numbers as well as rates, were estimated in Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and South America. Since 1990, the attributable burden has increased by 50%, driven largely by population growth and ageing. Globally, the impact of reductions in household air pollution was largely offset by increased ambient PM2.5. Interpretation Air pollution is a major risk factor for diabetes. We estimated that about a fifth of the global burden of type 2 diabetes is attributable PM2.5 pollution. Air pollution mitigation therefore might have an essential role in reducing the global disease burden resulting from type 2 diabetes. Copyright (C) 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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air pollution,diabetes,global burden,disease study
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