Researchers examined cancer registry data on more than 350,000
people diagnosed with lung cancer in California and found patients
who lived in communities with higher than average levels of air
pollution typically died sooner than their peers who lived in places
with cleaner air.
Patients with lung cancer may be a new subgroup of people
susceptible to the health impacts of air pollution, since exposures
after diagnosis may impact how long they live, said lead study
author Sandrah Eckel, a researcher at the University of Southern
California in Los Angeles.
Worldwide, lung malignancies kill about 1.6 million people a year,
causing nearly one in five cancer deaths, Eckel and colleagues note
in the journal Thorax.
To assess how air pollution may contribute to these deaths,
researchers examined concentrations of ozone, nitrogen dioxide and
so-called particulate matter.
Ozone is an unstable form of oxygen produced when various types of
traffic and industrial pollution react with sunlight. Nitrogen
dioxide is a byproduct of fossil fuel combustion that can contribute
to smog. And so-called particulate matter is a mixture of solid
particles and liquid droplets that can include dust, dirt, soot and
smoke.
All of these pollutants have been found to damage the lungs.
Almost half the patients in the current study lived at least 1,500
meters (almost one mile) away from a major interstate highway, while
fewer than 10 percent lived with 300 meters (about one-fifth of a
mile) of one. Air pollution is usually worse closer to these
highways.
Researchers tracked health outcomes for patients diagnosed with lung
cancer from 1988 to 2009 based on the level of air pollution near
their homes.
Patients were 69 years old on average at the time of diagnosis.
More than half were diagnosed at an advanced stage when tumors had
spread.
Overall, the average survival time was about 3.6 years for people
diagnosed with early stage disease and about four months for those
with advanced tumors that had spread beyond the lungs.
Air pollution appeared to have the greatest effect on survival for
people diagnosed with early-stage adenocarcinoma, the most common
type of lung cancer and the form that often afflicts non-smokers.
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In particular, patients diagnosed with early-stage disease had
average survival times of about 2.4 years with high exposure to fine
particulate matter, compared with 5.7 years with low exposure, the
researchers report.
For these early-stage patients, the risk of death from any cause
during the study period was 30 percent greater with exposure to
nitrogen dioxide, 26 percent higher with exposure to large
particulate matter and 38 percent bigger with fine particulate
matter, the study found.
One limitation of the study is that researchers focused on pollution
near residential addresses, which doesn’t account for how much time
patients spent outdoors breathing this air, the authors note.
Even so, the findings add to a small but growing body of evidence
linking pollution to worse outcomes after a lung cancer diagnosis,
Dr. Jaime Hart, a researcher at Brigham and Women’s and Harvard
Medical School in Boston, noted in an accompanying editorial.
“Studies have shown that pollution increases inflammation and
oxidative stress, both of which have been linked to increased
mortality,” Hart said by email. “Those studies weren't done in lung
cancer patients, but it is reasonable to think that similar things
may be occurring.”
Taken together, this emerging research suggests that patients with
lung cancer should consider reducing pollution exposure along with
other lifestyle changes aimed at boosting longevity such as smoking
cessation or dietary changes, Hart said.
“There are a number of common-sense precautions that anyone can take
to reduce their exposures to air pollution, including monitoring
daily air pollution alerts and reducing outdoor activities –
especially outdoor exercise – during high pollution periods, using
air filtration systems while indoors, and using the recirculate
setting of your car ventilation system while traveling in heavy
traffic,” Eckel noted.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2b8R0GI Thorax, online August 4, 2016.
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