The absolute and relative concentration-response patterns of air pollutants and the risk of Alzheimer’s disease
Igor Akushevich, Arseniy Yashkin, Larry Tupler, Meishuo Ouyang, Julia Kravchenko

TL;DR
This study explores how air pollution, specifically PM2.5, affects Alzheimer’s disease risk, finding that the impact varies by gender, race, and exposure levels.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel approach by simultaneously analyzing absolute and relative concentration-response patterns of PM2.5 exposure and AD risk.
Findings
Chronic low-level PM2.5 exposure is linked to increased Alzheimer’s disease risk, with significant variation across different population groups.
Males show steeper relative risk increases with PM2.5, while females have higher absolute incidence rates.
Native Americans show the steepest rise in AD risk with PM2.5 exposure, while Black and Asian populations show the lowest relative risk ratios.
Abstract
Existing literature lacks information on the relationship between exposure to ambient air contaminants and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) risk represented by simultaneous assessment of absolute and relative concentration-response patterns. This study focuses on quantifying PM2.5-exposure and AD-risk relationships with detailed analyses of the role of methodologic limitations and sources of bias (e.g., population heterogeneity) and identifying notable subpopulation differences and populations most vulnerable to PM2.5 exposure. Using Medicare and SEDAC data, we evaluated the effects of PM2.5 exposure on AD risk stratified by sex, race/ethnicity, and exposure level using absolute concentration-response functions based on age-adjusted rates and relative functions estimated via Cox models. The results show that chronic low-level exposures to PM2.5 were associated with higher AD risk which varied…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAir Quality and Health Impacts · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging · Indoor Air Quality and Microbial Exposure
