伊拉克和阿富汗退伍军人的烧伤坑暴露和慢性呼吸道疾病

S. Coughlin, A. Szema
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A statistically elevated rate of asthma was observed among personnel deployed to Kabul, relative to U.S.-stationed personnel (IRR 1.61; 95% CI, 1.22–2.12), which is consistent with earlier research findings reported by Szema et al. (2010). \n \nThirdly, because of the increasing time elapsed since exposure to burn pits during combat, the latency period may be approaching that sufficient to detect associations with emphysema in epidemiologic studies. It may also be feasible to conduct epidemiologic studies to examine associations with malignancies and pulmonary conditions that are infrequent in the general population (for example, glioblastoma of the brain, constrictive bronchiolitis) (King et al. 2011). A proportionate mortality ratio analysis of data from the Burn Pits 360 degrees registry, which was a hypothesis-generating study, found that deaths from malignancies were over-represented compared to deaths from chronic respiratory conditions (unpublished observations, Sunil Halder, 2018). \n \nIn addition to additional population-based and registry-based epidemiologic studies of chronic health conditions among veterans exposed to toxic fumes from burn pits, longitudinal studies are needed that include serial measurements of pulmonary function and novel biological markers of exposure to polychlorinated dibeno-p-dioxins/dibenzofurans (Woeller et al. 2016). Individual-level exposure data obtained from microRNAs would reduce misclassification of exposure assessments based upon assumed geographic burn pit emissions exposure and avoid potential recall bias. 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引用次数: 3

摘要

自当前西南亚冲突开始以来,已有超过200万名服务人员部署支持持久自由行动(OEF)和伊拉克自由行动(OIF) Sharkey (Sharkey et al. 2016)。服役人员在部署期间可能会暴露在各种环境危害中,包括来自不受管制的工业的污染物,来自沙漠环境的颗粒物质,军用车辆的废气以及露天燃烧坑的排放物。暴露于烧伤坑的排放物一直是一个令人担忧的问题,因为它可能导致呼吸系统疾病(哮喘、支气管炎、慢性阻塞性肺病、缩窄性细支气管炎)和其他慢性疾病(Sharkey等人,2016;国际移民组织2011)。2009年以前在战区广泛使用的燃烧坑是用于燃烧固体废物的开放区域。燃烧坑排放可能包括有害微粒和化学物质,包括二恶英、呋喃、铅、汞、挥发性有机化合物和多环芳烃(Liu et al. 2016)。尽管有大量的媒体报道和有关服役人员的轶事报告,但直到最近才有关于接触烧伤坑对健康不利影响的流行病学证据。例如,早在2014年,Abraham等人就指出,“没有研究确定烧伤坑排放暴露与部署后慢性肺病之间的关联。”同样,美国医学研究所(Institute of Medicine)在2011年得出结论,没有足够的证据来得出确凿的结论,说明暴露于烧伤坑的服役人员可能会对健康产生什么样的长期影响。有几个因素表明,这种情况可能会改变。首先,参加空气传播危害和露天烧伤坑登记的退伍军人人数稳步增加,这使得开展基于登记的流行病学研究成为可能(Liu et al. 2016)。2013年,国会授权的一项公法要求退伍军人事务部(Department of Veterans Affairs)为在伊拉克或阿富汗可能接触过烧伤坑的退伍军人建立一个登记处。参与登记是通过完成其在线自我评估问卷来完成的,该问卷旨在全面了解参与者的军事暴露和健康状况(Liu et al. 2016)。其次,最近的两项流行病学研究发现,暴露于烧伤坑并部署到阿富汗喀布尔与慢性呼吸系统疾病有关(Liu et al. 2016;Sharkey et al. 2016)。Liu等人(2016)研究了假定的地理和自我报告的烧伤坑排放暴露与空气危害和露天烧伤坑登记参与者的呼吸和心血管结果之间的关系。作者发现,自报肺气肿、慢性支气管炎或慢性阻塞性肺病的高风险与在选定烧伤坑2英里内部署天数增加(p趋势= 0.01)和自报烧伤坑烟雾暴露(p趋势= 0.0005)有关。Sharkey等人(2016)进行了一项回顾性队列研究,调查部署到阿富汗喀布尔与美国军事人员随后的呼吸健康之间的关系。研究对象包括部署在喀布尔的人员、选定的持久自由行动地点的人员、驻扎在大韩民国的人员以及驻美人员。在统计上,与美国驻扎人员相比,部署在喀布尔的人员哮喘发病率较高(IRR 1.61;95% CI, 1.22-2.12),这与Szema et al.(2010)早先报道的研究结果一致。第三,由于在战斗中暴露于烧伤坑的时间越来越长,潜伏期可能接近于足以在流行病学研究中发现与肺气肿的关联。进行流行病学研究以检查与恶性肿瘤和一般人群中不常见的肺部疾病(例如,脑胶质母细胞瘤,缩窄性细支气管炎)的关联也可能是可行的(King et al. 2011)。对Burn Pits 360度登记处数据的比例死亡率分析(这是一项假设生成研究)发现,与慢性呼吸系统疾病死亡相比,恶性肿瘤死亡的比例过高(未发表的观察结果,Sunil Halder, 2018)。除了对暴露于烧伤坑有毒烟雾的退伍军人的慢性健康状况进行额外的基于人群和基于登记的流行病学研究外,还需要进行纵向研究,包括肺功能的系列测量和暴露于多氯二苯并对二恶英/二苯并呋烷的新型生物标志物(Woeller等,2016)。
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Burn Pits Exposure and Chronic Respiratory Illnesses among Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
Since the beginning of the current conflicts in Southwest Asia, more than 2 million service members have deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) Sharkey (Sharkey et al. 2016). Service members can be exposed to a variety of environmental hazards during deployment including pollutants from unregulated industry, particulate matter from desert environments, exhaust from military vehicles, and emissions from open-air burn pits. Exposure to emissions from burn pits has been a cause for concern because of the potential for respiratory health conditions (asthma, bronchitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, constrictive bronchiolitis) and other chronic health conditions (Sharkey et al. 2016; IOM 2011). Burn pits, widely used in combat zones before 2009, are open areas for burning solid waste. Burn pit emissions can include harmful particulates and chemicals including dioxins, furans, lead, mercury, volatile organic compounds, and polcyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (Liu et al. 2016). Despite considerable media coverage and anecdotal reports from concerned service members, epidemiologic evidence of adverse health effects from burn pits exposure has been lacking until recently. For example, as recently as 2014, Abraham et al. noted that “no study has identified an association between burn pit emissions exposure and post deployment chronic lung conditions.” Similarly, the Institute of Medicine concluded in 2011 that there was insufficient evidence to develop firm conclusions about what long-term health effects might be seen in service members exposed to burn pits. Several factors suggest that this situation is likely to change. First, the number of veterans who have participated in the Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry has steadily increased, making it feasible to conduct registry-based epidemiologic studies (Liu et al. 2016). A public law mandated by Congress in in 2013 required the Department of Veterans Affairs to establish a registry for veterans with potential burn pit exposure in Iraq or Afghanistan. Participation in the registry is accomplished by completing its online self-assessment questionnaire, which was designed to obtain a broad picture of the participants’ military exposures and health (Liu et al. 2016). Secondly, two recent epidemiologic studies have found that exposure to burn pits and deployment to Kabul, Afghanistan is associated with chronic respiratory conditions (Liu et al. 2016; Sharkey et al. 2016). Liu et al. (2016) examined associations between assumed geographic and self-reported burn pit emissions exposure and respiratory and cardiovascular outcomes in participants of the Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry. The authors found significant dose-response associations for higher risk of self-reported emphysema, chronic bronchitis, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with increased days of deployment within 2 miles of selected burn pits (P-trend = 0.01) and self-reported burn pit smoke exposure (P-trend = 0.0005). Sharkey et al. (2016) conducted a retrospective cohort study to investigate associations between deployment to Kabul, Afghanistan and subsequent respiratory health among U.S. military personnel. The study population consisted of personnel who deployed to Kabul, select Operation Enduring Freedom locations, personnel stationed in the Republic of Korea, and U.S.-stationed personnel. A statistically elevated rate of asthma was observed among personnel deployed to Kabul, relative to U.S.-stationed personnel (IRR 1.61; 95% CI, 1.22–2.12), which is consistent with earlier research findings reported by Szema et al. (2010). Thirdly, because of the increasing time elapsed since exposure to burn pits during combat, the latency period may be approaching that sufficient to detect associations with emphysema in epidemiologic studies. It may also be feasible to conduct epidemiologic studies to examine associations with malignancies and pulmonary conditions that are infrequent in the general population (for example, glioblastoma of the brain, constrictive bronchiolitis) (King et al. 2011). A proportionate mortality ratio analysis of data from the Burn Pits 360 degrees registry, which was a hypothesis-generating study, found that deaths from malignancies were over-represented compared to deaths from chronic respiratory conditions (unpublished observations, Sunil Halder, 2018). In addition to additional population-based and registry-based epidemiologic studies of chronic health conditions among veterans exposed to toxic fumes from burn pits, longitudinal studies are needed that include serial measurements of pulmonary function and novel biological markers of exposure to polychlorinated dibeno-p-dioxins/dibenzofurans (Woeller et al. 2016). Individual-level exposure data obtained from microRNAs would reduce misclassification of exposure assessments based upon assumed geographic burn pit emissions exposure and avoid potential recall bias. Other studies are needed that include additional documented burn pit sites integrating particulate matter data, meterological and wind data, and other in-theatre exposures to understand the short- and long-term respiratory health issues associated with open-air burn pit smoke exposure (Smith et al. 2012).
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