Fine-Scale Modeling of Individual Exposures to Ambient PM2.5, EC, NOx, CO for the Coronary Artery Disease and Environmental Exposure (CADEE) Study

Breen, M; Chang, SY; Breen, M; Xu, Y; Isakov, V; Arunachalam, S; Carraway, MS; Devlin, R; ,

HERO ID

7689909

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2020

Language

English

PMID

32461808

HERO ID 7689909
In Press No
Year 2020
Title Fine-Scale Modeling of Individual Exposures to Ambient PM2.5, EC, NOx, CO for the Coronary Artery Disease and Environmental Exposure (CADEE) Study
Authors Breen, M; Chang, SY; Breen, M; Xu, Y; Isakov, V; Arunachalam, S; Carraway, MS; Devlin, R; ,
Journal Atmosphere
Volume 11
Issue 1
Page Numbers 65
Abstract Air pollution epidemiological studies often use outdoor concentrations from central-site monitors as exposure surrogates, which can induce measurement error. The goal of this study was to improve exposure assessments of ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5), elemental carbon (EC), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and carbon monoxide (CO) for a repeated measurements study with 15 individuals with coronary artery disease in central North Carolina called the Coronary Artery Disease and Environmental Exposure (CADEE) Study. We developed a fine-scale exposure modeling approach to determine five tiers of individual-level exposure metrics for PM2.5, EC, NOx, CO using outdoor concentrations, on-road vehicle emissions, weather, home building characteristics, time-locations, and time-activities. We linked an urban-scale air quality model, residential air exchange rate model, building infiltration model, global positioning system (GPS)-based microenvironment model, and accelerometer-based inhaled ventilation model to determine residential outdoor concentrations (Cout_home, Tier 1), residential indoor concentrations (Cin_home, Tier 2), personal outdoor concentrations (Cout_personal, Tier 3), exposures (E, Tier 4), and inhaled doses (D, Tier 5). We applied the fine-scale exposure model to determine daily 24-h average PM2.5, EC, NOx, CO exposure metrics (Tiers 1-5) for 720 participant-days across the 25 months of CADEE. Daily modeled metrics showed considerable temporal and home-to-home variability of Cout_home and Cin_home (Tiers 1-2) and person-to-person variability of Cout_personal, E, and D (Tiers 3-5). Our study demonstrates the ability to apply an urban-scale air quality model with an individual-level exposure model to determine multiple tiers of exposure metrics for an epidemiological study, in support of improving health risk assessments.
Doi 10.3390/atmos11010065
Pmid 32461808
Wosid WOS:000516826200065
Url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/11/1/65
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword air pollution; building infiltration modeling; exposure modeling; gaseous pollutants; particulate matter