Rheumatoid Arthritis Activity and Short-Term Exposure to Air Pollutants
in Metropolitan Areas in the North of Italy
Abstract
Background. Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) flare is related to an increased
joint damage, disability and healthcare use. The impact of short-term
air pollution exposure on RA activity is still a matter of debate. We
investigated in a cross-sectional study whether short-term exposure to
particulate matter (PM)10, PM2.5, nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and ozone (O3)
affected RA disease activity. Methods. 422 consecutive RA patients
resident in Lombardy, North of Italy were studied. Air pollutant
concentrations, estimated by Regional Environmental Protection Agency
(Lombardy – Italy) at municipality resolution, were used to assign
short-term exposure from the day of visit back to 14 days. Results.
Sparse punctual significant negative associations emerged between PM10,
PM2.5, NO2 and RA disease activity, whereas positive associations were
observed for O3. Moreover, patients were stratified according to their
ongoing Disease Modifying anti-Rheumatic Drugs (DMARDs) treatment: no
DMARDs (n=25), conventional synthetic - csDMARDs (n=108), and biological
or targeted synthetic b/tsDMARDs (n=289). At visit, an inverse
association was observed in the b/tsDMARDs group between PM2.5 and
Disease Activity Score on 28 joints (DAS28) (-0.047±0.020, p=0.023), a
positive tendency in the no-DMARD group (0.125±0.070, p=0.075) and no
association for csDMARDs group (0.042±0.039, p=0.288). The association
between O3 the day before the visit and DAS28 was positive only in the
b/tsDMARDs group (0.038±0.009, p<0.001). Conclusion. The
impact of air pollution short-term exposure seems minimally clinical
relevant, as the scattered significant differences were observed.
Further evidence is needed to elucidate determinants of RA flare and the
implications for management.