# Association between PM2.5 from a coal mine fire and FeNO concentration 7.5 years later

**Authors:** Sara Kress, Tyler J. Lane, David Brown, Catherine L. Smith, Caroline X. Gao, Thomas McCrabb, Mikayla Thomas, Brigitte M. Borg, Bruce R. Thompson, Michael J. Abramson

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12890-024-03075-w · 2024-06-06

## TL;DR

This study found no long-term link between exposure to PM2.5 from a coal mine fire and airway inflammation in adults.

## Contribution

The study provides novel evidence on long-term respiratory health effects of coal mine fire PM2.5 exposure.

## Key findings

- No association found between PM2.5 exposure and FeNO levels in the general adult sample.
- Point estimates were close to zero in all subgroups analyzed.
- Short-term and medium-term effects did not translate to long-term inflammation.

## Abstract

There are few long-term studies of respiratory health effects of landscape fires, despite increasing frequency and intensity due to climate change. We investigated the association between exposure to coal mine fire PM2.5 and fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) concentration 7.5 years later.

Adult residents of Morwell, who were exposed to the 2014 Hazelwood mine fire over 6 weeks, and unexposed residents of Sale, participated in the Hazelwood Health Study Respiratory Stream in 2021, including measurements of FeNO concentration, a marker of eosinophilic airway inflammation. Individual exposure to coal mine fire PM2.5 was modelled and mapped to time-location diaries. The effect of exposure to PM2.5 on log-transformed FeNO in exhaled breath was investigated using multivariate linear regression models in the entire sample and stratified by potentially vulnerable subgroups.

A total of 326 adults (mean age: 57 years) had FeNO measured. The median FeNO level (interquartile range [IQR]) was 17.5 [15.0] ppb, and individual daily exposure to coal mine fire PM2.5 was 7.2 [13.8] µg/m3. We did not identify evidence of association between coal mine fire PM2.5 exposure and FeNO in the general adult sample, nor in various potentially vulnerable subgroups. The point estimates were consistently close to zero in the total sample and subgroups.

Despite previous short-term impacts on FeNO and respiratory health outcomes in the medium term, we found no evidence that PM2.5 from the Hazelwood coal mine fire was associated with any long-term impact on eosinophilic airway inflammation measured by FeNO levels.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Respiratory (MESH:D012131), eosinophilic airway inflammation (MESH:D007249), mine fire (MESH:D000092422)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11157905/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11157905