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Annual PM2.5 exposure and clinical, laboratory, and stroke-risk outcomes in pediatric sickle cell disease
Paul E. George, Grace Kalmus, Joseph Lipscomb, David H. Howard, Benjamin Kopp, Wilbur A. Lam, Stefanie Ebelt
Paul E. George, Grace Kalmus, Joseph Lipscomb, David H. Howard, Benjamin Kopp, Wilbur A. Lam, Stefanie Ebelt
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Clinical Research and Public Health Clinical Research Hematology

Annual PM2.5 exposure and clinical, laboratory, and stroke-risk outcomes in pediatric sickle cell disease

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Abstract

Sickle cell disease (SCD) causes severe morbidity and early mortality, yet it varies phenotypically. Both air pollution and SCD affect the cardiorespiratory, inflammatory, and endothelial systems; however, limited evidence exists on the effect of long-term air pollution exposure in SCD. We hypothesized that annual ambient (outdoor) concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM2.5), particles with a diameter of 2.5 μm or less, at a child’s home would be significantly associated with worse clinical, laboratory, and stroke-risk imaging outcomes. Patient data for this retrospective study were obtained from a cohort of children with SCD (from 2010 to 2019). Annual PM2.5 exposure was estimated using remote-sensing air pollution datasets. Statistical analyses employed fixed effects multivariable models, offering a robust approach to isolate the effect of PM2.5 exposure. The final cohort included 1,089 children with SCD. Higher annual PM2.5 concentrations were significantly associated with more annual hospital days, higher likelihood of hospitalization and abnormal stroke-risk screening, and elevated inflammatory markers. Of note, hydroxyurea use mitigated the inflammatory response to PM2.5 but did not mitigate the effect of PM2.5 on clinical outcomes. Importantly, the elevated stroke risk associated with PM2.5 exposure persisted, even among children receiving hydroxyurea therapy, highlighting a critical concern in pediatric SCD management. These results underscore the clinical importance of addressing environmental factors for comprehensive SCD care.

Authors

Paul E. George, Grace Kalmus, Joseph Lipscomb, David H. Howard, Benjamin Kopp, Wilbur A. Lam, Stefanie Ebelt

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Figure 3

Effect of prior PM2.5 burden on likelihood of abnormal stroke risk screening (transcranial Doppler), demonstrating more significant effects with increasing PM2.5 exposure time frame.

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Effect of prior PM2.5 burden on likelihood of abnormal stroke risk scree...
This figure shows the effect of PM2.5 burden, which is defined as the average PM2.5 values at the home address across 3 years prior, 2 years prior, and 1 year prior to the year of interest, on the likelihood of an abnormal transcranial Doppler ultrasound. Note that transcranial Doppler ultrasound is the standard means of screening for stroke risk in children with SCD and is recommended for every child between 2 and 16 years of age with HbSS/HbSβ0. Abnormal screening, defined as a velocity of 200 cm/s or higher, is associated with significantly increased risk of stroke and has important treatment implications. Transcranial Doppler outcomes were calculated using logistic multivariable models and 820 individuals across 2,284 patient-years for current and 1-year burden, 682 patients across 1,750 patient-years for 2-year burden, and 587 patients across 1,398 patient-years for 3-year burden.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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