Study association of urinary Club Cell Protein with air pollution-related pulmonary function compromised among children

IF 2.3 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.cegh.2024.101776
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Abstract

Background

Childhood exposure to air pollution exacerbates respiratory conditions and even carries deleterious effects on lung functions in adulthood. It is desirable to establish a non-invasive screening test for children to predict early lung insult with air pollution exposure. The association between serum club cell protein (CC16) and obstructive airway diseases is known, but the same is not explored with air-pollution-related lung insult and pulmonary function test (PFT) parameters.

Aim

To investigate the association between urinary CC16 and PFT parameters in children exposed to differing levels of air pollution.

Methods

This cross-sectional study recruited 107 children from critically-polluted area (CPA) and 96 age-sex-matched children from non-polluted area (NPA). PFT and urinary CC16 were determined with standard techniques. Air quality parameters were estimated with adherence to National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS).

Results

CPA was observed with 2.5 times poorer Air-Quality-Index compared to NPA. Urinary CC16 levels of children were four-fold higher in CPA compared to NPA (p < 0.001). CPA children were significantly deprived in PFT parameters [FVC(L)-1.86 v/s 2.02, p = 0.01; FEV1(L/s)-1.71 v/s 1.86, p = 0.01 & PEFR(L/s)- 3.25 v/s 3.69, p < 0.001]. While adjusted for physiological parameters, urinary CC16 observed with significant negative association with PFT parameters (FVC: β = −0.02, p=0.03; FEV1: β = −0.03, p=0.001 & FEF25–75 %: β = −0.05, p=0.04).

Conclusion

The significant decline in lung function parameters and elevated urinary CC16 levels among children in polluted areas underscore the need for further research to validate urinary CC16 as a reliable screening tool for respiratory health monitoring among children.

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研究尿液细胞蛋白与空气污染导致的儿童肺功能受损之间的关系
背景儿童期暴露于空气污染会加重呼吸系统疾病,甚至对成年后的肺功能产生有害影响。我们希望建立一种无创的儿童筛查检测方法,以预测暴露于空气污染中的早期肺损伤。目的 研究暴露于不同程度空气污染的儿童尿液中的 CC16 与肺功能测试(PFT)参数之间的关系。方法 这项横断面研究招募了 107 名来自严重污染地区(CPA)的儿童和 96 名来自非污染地区(NPA)的年龄性别匹配的儿童。采用标准技术测定 PFT 和尿液中的 CC16。结果显示,重度污染区的空气质量指数比非污染区低 2.5 倍。CPA 儿童尿液中的 CC16 含量是 NPA 儿童的四倍(p < 0.001)。CPA儿童的肺活量参数明显偏低[FVC(L)-1.86 v/s 2.02,p = 0.01;FEV1(L/s)-1.71 v/s 1.86,p = 0.01 & PEFR(L/s)- 3.25 v/s 3.69,p <0.001]。结论 污染地区儿童肺功能参数的显著下降和尿液中CC16水平的升高凸显了进一步研究验证尿液中CC16作为儿童呼吸健康监测的可靠筛查工具的必要性。
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来源期刊
Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health
Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
7.70%
发文量
218
审稿时长
66 days
期刊介绍: Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health (CEGH) is a multidisciplinary journal and it is published four times (March, June, September, December) a year. The mandate of CEGH is to promote articles on clinical epidemiology with focus on developing countries in the context of global health. We also accept articles from other countries. It publishes original research work across all disciplines of medicine and allied sciences, related to clinical epidemiology and global health. The journal publishes Original articles, Review articles, Evidence Summaries, Letters to the Editor. All articles published in CEGH are peer-reviewed and published online for immediate access and citation.
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