A mix of air pollution, dense city design, and limited green space accounts for major asthma cases in urban areas.

External exposome and incident asthma across the life course in 14 European cohorts: a prospective analysis within the EXPANSE project
Go to source). The study covers nearly 350,000 people of different ages, from 14 cohorts in seven European countries. Information on home addresses of each individual made it possible to link data on various environmental risks in the urban environment to individual people. The environmental exposures included were air pollution, outdoor temperatures, and the level of urban density. The assessment was partly based on satellite images showing grey, green, or blue areas, i.e., where there were buildings, green spaces, or water.
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Linking Environment to Asthma Development
During the study period, nearly 7,500 of the study participants developed asthma as children or adults. The researchers found that 11.6% of asthma cases could be explained by the combination of environmental factors. Or, to put it another way, in a favourable environment, approximately one in ten people with asthma would not have developed the disease. The combination of air pollution, lack of green spaces, and dense urban development was most relevant for the development of asthma.“This is useful for politicians and others involved in urban planning. The method makes it possible to identify risk areas in existing urban areas, but it can also be used when planning future urban environments,” says Erik Melén, professor at the Department of Clinical Research and Education, Södersjukhuset, and last author of the study.
Next Steps Toward Understanding Asthma Mechanisms
The next step for the researchers is to examine blood samples from some of the study participants. The aim is to identify their metabolome, i.e., a composite picture of the body's metabolism and breakdown products. The purpose is to understand how external environmental factors affect the body, which could provide a better understanding of how asthma develops.The study was conducted in collaboration between various research groups within the framework of the EU project EXPANSE. The researchers involved in the project are also investigating how the risk of other diseases such as stroke, heart attack, COPD and diabetes, is affected by individual exposomes, i.e., the total exposure to many environmental factors.
- External exposome and incident asthma across the life course in 14 European cohorts: a prospective analysis within the EXPANSE project - (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanepe/article/PIIS2666-7762(25)00106-1/fulltext)
Source-Eurekalert
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