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. 2021 Aug 25;16(8):e0256526. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0256526

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and ambient air pollution: A dose-effect relationship and an association with OHCA incidence

Francesca Romana Gentile 1,2, Roberto Primi 1, Enrico Baldi 2,3, Sara Compagnoni 1,2, Claudio Mare 4, Enrico Contri 5, Francesca Reali 6, Daniele Bussi 7, Fabio Facchin 8, Alessia Currao 1, Sara Bendotti 1, Simone Savastano 1,*; Lombardia CARe researchers
Editor: Elena Cavarretta9
PMCID: PMC8386838  PMID: 34432840

Abstract

Background

Pollution has been suggested as a precipitating factor for cardiovascular diseases. However, data about the link between air pollution and the risk of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) are limited and controversial.

Methods

By collecting data both in the OHCA registry and in the database of the regional agency for environmental protection (ARPA) of the Lombardy region, all medical OHCAs and the mean daily concentration of pollutants including fine particulate matter (PM10, PM2.5), benzene (C6H6), carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulphur dioxide (SO2), and ozone (O3) were considered from January 1st to December 31st, 2019 in the southern part of the Lombardy region (provinces of Pavia, Lodi, Cremona and Mantua; 7863 km2; about 1550000 inhabitants). Days were divided into high or low incidence of OHCA according to the median value. A Probit dose-response analysis and both uni- and multivariable logistic regression models were provided for each pollutant.

Results

The concentrations of all the pollutants were significantly higher in days with high incidence of OHCA except for O3, which showed a significant countertrend. After correcting for temperature, a significant dose-response relationship was demonstrated for all the pollutants examined. All the pollutants were also strongly associated with high incidence of OHCA in multivariable analysis with correction for temperature, humidity, and day-to-day concentration changes.

Conclusions

Our results clarify the link between pollutants and the acute risk of cardiac arrest suggesting the need of both improving the air quality and integrating pollution data in future models for the organization of emergency medical services.

Introduction

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is a leading cause of death in industrialized countries. Both in Europe and the United States more than 350.000 OHCA occur annually [1, 2] In Italy, an average of 60000 OHCA occur per year, with an incidence of 1 per 1000 inhabitants. OHCA mostly occurs in patients with structural heart disease, in particular to those with coronary heart disease (CHD). Notably, in 15% of cases OHCA represents the initial clinical manifestation of CHD [3]. However, 10 to 15% of OHCAs occur in the absence of a structural heart disease, especially in young age. Despite efforts made in recent years to prevent and treat cardiac arrest, only 10% survive until discharge [4]. Due to the high mortality rate, the identification of factors that may precipitate cardiac arrest represents a major challenge and efforts in the field of primary prevention and risk assessment are needed. Over recent decades, air pollution has been established as a potential trigger for OHCA. The global mortality rate attributed to air pollutions is estimated at 8.8 million/year and the loss of life expectancy (LLE) from air pollution surpasses that of smoking, all forms of violence, HIV/AIDS, parasitic, vector-borne, and other infectious diseases [5]. Several studies have tried to estimate the health effects and cardiovascular morbidity of short and long-term exposure to various air pollutants highlighting how pollutants may contribute due to multiple mechanisms, such as endothelial dysfunction, vasoconstriction and systemic inflammation. However, the relationship between specific air pollutants and OHCA remains controversial.

The primary aim of this study is to examine the impact of short-term exposure to particulate and gaseous pollutants on the incidence of OHCA in a vast metropolitan and rural area that encompasses four provinces of the Po Valley in Northern Italy, one of the most polluted areas in Italy and Europe [6], due to its levels of industrialization and high population density. The secondary aim of this study is to search for and describe a dose-effect relationship, which could help predict OHCA incidence based on the concentration of pollutants in a specific area.

Materials and methods

Setting

This is a multicentre, observational, retrospective study based on prospectively collected data from our regional cardiac arrest registry (Lombardia Cardiac Arrest Registry: Lombardia CARe; clinical trial identifier on clinicaltrials.gov NCT03197142, ethical committee approval reference 20140028219 by the Ethical Committee of the Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo in Pavia), started in 2015. Data are collected according to the 2014 Utstein style [7]. This registry represents the largest in Italy as it prospectively collects automated data on OHCAs occurring in five different provinces of Northern Italy: Pavia (since January 2015), Lodi, Mantua, Cremona (since January 2019) and Varese (since January 2020), resulting in a total covered population of more than 2.4 million inhabitants. Registry data were collected and managed using REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) tools hosted at Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo [8]. REDCap is a secure, web-based application designed to support data capture for research studies, providing 1) an intuitive interface for validated data entry; 2) audit trails for tracking data manipulation and export procedures; 3) automated export procedures for seamless data downloads to common statistical packages; and 4) procedures for importing data from external sources.

Pre-hospital information of each OHCA is automatically captured from the data warehouse of the Agenzia Regionale Emergenza Urgenza (AREU), our regional Emergency Medical Service (EMS), filed in our database the day after the event and then checked and validated by the local EMS personnel of each province. For each hospital of the territory, a team of doctors manage information regarding both the in-hospital stay and the short and long-term outcomes. Pre-hospital, in-hospital and follow-up information are combined in the Lombardia Care Registry and data quality is performed by a dedicated Study Management Team.

Study population

The study population includes all the patients with diagnosed OHCA from the 1st of January 2019 to the 31st of December 2019 within the provinces of Pavia, Cremona, Lodi and Mantua in the Po Valley (Fig 1). These provinces cover a territory of 7.863 km2 with urban, suburban and rural areas and a population of over 1.5 million in 2019. The Po Valley is one of the most important industrial and agricultural areas in Italy and has a high population density. Moreover, due to the Alpine and Apennine chains surrounding the area, there is scarce ventilation so that the stagnation of pollutants in the air is quite common, especially in the fall and winter. For the present study, only OHCAs of presumed medical aetiology have been considered assuming that pollution has no effect on other causes of cardiac arrest.

Fig 1. Map of the Lombardy region.

Fig 1

The study territory in which OHCA are displayed as light-blue dots and monitoring stations as red dots. Created by Tableau Public software (Version 2020.3, LLC, Salesforce Company).

Air pollution and meteorological data

Particulate and gaseous pollutants including particles with aerodynamic diameter smaller than 10 and 2.5 μm (PM10, PM2.5), benzene (C6H6), carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulphur dioxide (SO2), and ozone (O3) were available from the regional agency for environmental protection (ARPA), which monitors the air quality in all 20 Regions of Italy. A total of 29 monitoring stations were distributed in the study territory; specifically, six monitors were in the province of Cremona, seven in Lodi, seven in Mantua, and nine in Pavia (Fig 1). Daily concentration of both PM10 and PM2.5 were measured by 24 and 10 stations respectively; hourly concentrations were provided by 27 stations for NO2, 7 for CO, 10 for Benzene, 16 for O3 and 12 for SO2. To avoid any potential confounding environmental factors, we also took into account meteorological data such as hourly temperature and hourly relative humidity during the study period, also provided by ARPA.

Statistical analysis

Categorical variables were compared with the Chi-square test and presented as number and percentage. Continuous variables were compared either with the t-test and presented as mean ± standard deviation or compared with the Mann-Whitney test and presented as median and interquartile range (IQR) according to normal distribution tested with the D’Agostino-Pearson test.

We calculated the daily mean concentration for each pollutant for every monitoring station and then the mean value for the study territory was obtained. The change of the mean concentration between the index day and the previous day (day-to-day concentration change) was also calculated for every pollutant.

A correlation between the mean concentrations of every pollutant among the four provinces was tested via a multivariable regression model.

The daily incidence of OHCAs was calculated considering the daily number of OHCAs and the number of inhabitants in the study territory, monthly updated by the Italian institute of statistics (ISTAT), and then presented as cases per 100,000 inhabitants. The days of the year were then divided into days with lower or higher incidence of OHCA according to the median value of the daily incidence.

An univariable logistic regression model was run for every pollutant to test the strength of association of the probability of having an incidence of OHCA higher than median value. We also ran a multivariable logistic model testing the strength of association of every single pollutant corrected for temperature, day-to-day concentration change and relative humidity.

A dose-response Probit regression model was run for each one of the pollutants, both before and after correction for temperature, where the dose was intended as the mean daily concentration of the pollutant and the presumed effect was the daily incidence of OHCA higher than the median value of the period.

Statistical analysis was performed with MedCalc software (Version 19.1.2 by MedCalc Software bv, Ostend, Belgium) and Fig 1 was created by using Tableau Public software (Version 2020.3, LLC, Salesforce Company). A p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

OHCA incidence and population characteristics

Out of the 1922 EMS-assessed OHCA over the study period in the area of interest, 1582 had a presumptive medical aetiology (82%) according to the Utstein classification. The median daily incidence of OHCA in the overall territory was 0.3 cases/100.000 inhabitants.

The vast majority of OHCAs occurred at home. Less commonly, OHCA was reported to have occurred within nursing facilities, on the street, or in public places. The median age was 80 years old (IQR 68–87) and male sex accounted for 57% of cases. Resuscitation was attempted in 76.2% of the cases and ROSC was reached in 19.8%. The percentage of survived events was 19% but the survival to hospital discharge was achieved in 7.4% of the cases. Other characteristics of the study population are presented in S1 Table.

Air pollution and incidence of OHCA

The trends of the atmospheric concentrations of the seven pollutants, temperature and humidity throughout the year were found to be highly statistically correlated among the four provinces of the study territory with multiple correlation coefficients (R-value) higher than 0.9. Only SO2 showed an R-value of 0.4 which was still statistically significant (Fig 2).

Fig 2. Panels and trends.

Fig 2

The left panels depict the daily trend combined with the seven-days mean trend of each pollutant for every province. In the right panels the daily trend combined with the seven-days mean of all the study territory are displayed. The R value is the multiple correlation coefficient, resulting from the multiple regression analysis and referred to the correlation between the different provinces. R value is provided for every pollutant.

Dividing the study period into days with high or low incidence of OHCA, according to the median value of the daily incidence (0.3 cases/100.000 inhabitants), we found that the concentrations of most pollutants were significantly higher in the days with a greater number of OHCAs as compared to those with a lower incidence. Benzene was the pollutant with the greatest difference [0.7 (IQR 0.4–1.2) vs 0.4 (IQR 0.3–0.7), p < 0.001], whereas SO2 had the lowest and least significant difference between the two periods [3.2 (IQR 2.8–3.6) vs 3.1 (IQR 2.7–3.5), p = 0.046]. O3 showed a countertrend, being significantly higher in the low-incidence period [29.9 (IQR 10.9–61.7) vs 56.1 (IQR 25.5–74.1), p<0.001]. Similarly, an increase in temperature was found significantly associated with the low-incidence period [10.1 (IQR 5.2–14.8) vs 15.1 (IQR 8.9–23.3), p<0.001] (Table 1).

Table 1. Air pollutants and meteorologic data.

Variable Days with high incidence of OHCA (>0.3 cases/100000) Days with low incidence of OHCA (≤0.3 cases/100000)
Median IQR Median IQR p value
Benzene (μg/m3) 0.7 0.4–1.2 0.4 0.3–0.7 <0.0001
CO (mg/m3) 0.5 0.4–0.7 0.4 0.4–0.5 <0.0001
NO2 (μg/m3) 27.4 18.4–39.6 20.2 15.1–27.6 <0.0001
O3 (μg/m3) 29.9 10.9–61.7 56.1 25.5–74.1 <0.0001
PM10 (μg/m3) 29.6 19.5–46 24.9 18.7–36.3 0.0219
PM2.5 (μg/m3) 21.1 12.6–35.5 15.5 10.8–24 0.0040
SO2 (μg/m3) 3.2 2.8–3.6 3.1 2.7–3.5 0.0464
Temperature (°C) 10.1 5.2–14.8 15.1 8.9–23.3 <0.0001
Relative humidity (%) 81.0 65.4–95.1 74.7 65.4–87.8 0.0778

Comparison of atmospheric mean concentration of each pollutant, temperature, and humidity between days with high incidence of OHCA (> 0.3cases/100000 inhabitants) and days with low OHCA incidence (≤ 0.3cases/100000 inhabitants).

In a univariable regression model, all but SO2 were strongly associated with higher incidence of OHCA, while O3 [OR 0.98 (95% CI 0.97–0.99) p<0.001], as well as temperature [OR 0.93 (95% CI 0.9–0.96) p<0.001], confirmed their countertrend (Table 2).

Table 2. Univariable logistic regression.

Univariable logistic regression model for the probability of having a higher incidence of OHCA (>0.3 cases/100000)
Variable OR 95%CI p
Benzene (μg/m3) 2.3 1.6–2.7 <0.001
CO (mg/m3) 10.6 3.3–36.8 <0.001
NO2 (μg/m3) 1.04 1.03–1.07 <0.001
O3 (μg/m3) 0.98 0.97–0.99 <0.001
PM10 (μg/m3) 1.01 1–1.02 0.01
PM2.5 (μg/m3) 1.02 1–1.04 0.002
SO2 (μg/m3) 1.3 0.96–1.8 0.09
Temperature (°C) 0.93 0.9–0.96 <0.001
Relative humidity (%) 1.01 0.99–1.03 0.08

OR = odd ratio, CI = Confidence intervals, p = p-value.

To avoid any confounding factors, we tested via a multivariable logistic regression model the strength of association of every pollutant after correction for the mean daily temperature, the mean daily relative humidity and for the day-to-day concentration change of the indexed pollutant. After correction, every pollutant tested demonstrated a statistically significant effect in being independently associated with higher incidence of OHCA. Interestingly, even O3, which initially seemed to have an inverse relationship with OHCA incidence, was found to be strongly associated with high incidence of OHCA after these corrections. Moreover, SO2, which in the previous analysis showed a non-significant effect, was shown to a be associated with higher OHCA incidence (Fig 3).

Fig 3. Forest-plot.

Fig 3

Odds ratio resulting from multivariable logistic regression model for the probability of having a higher incidence of OHCA (>0.3 cases/100.000) after correction for temperature, day-to-day concentration change and humidity.

By using the Probit regression analysis, a dose-response relationship was demonstrated; before adjusting for temperature, the risk of OHCA increased significantly in relation to the elevation of the atmospheric concentration of all the pollutants analysed except for SO2 (p = 0.08). O3 confirmed its statistically significant negative relationship (p<0.001). However, based on the strong effect of temperature on OHCA incidence, the analysis was adjusted for temperature after which all the pollutants examined were found to be statistically significantly and directly related to a higher risk of OHCA. Specifically, O3 inverted its initial trend (p<0.001) and SO2 was found to be significant (p<0.001). (Fig 4).

Fig 4. Dose-response curves.

Fig 4

Probit analysis for every pollutant before (left panels) and after (right panels) correction for temperature.

Discussion

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to have provided a significant dose-response relationship between such a large number of air pollutants and an increased risk of OHCA. The identification of the shape of the exposure-curve is a key issue in decision making and strategic thinking in public health. All of the curves demonstrate that dose escalation leads to an increase in OHCA risk without showing any safe threshold (Fig 4). This is a reminder that large populations are exposed to differing levels of OHCA risk dependent upon the levels of pollutants in the specific area in which they live. To date, there are no threshold levels of pollutants advised as safe for the general population [9]. In our study, the concentration of every single pollutant examined correlated in the short-term throughout the year, even when the pollutants’ concentrations were lower than the limit currently set by law in Italy or recommended by the World Health Organization’s air quality guidelines (AQG). This statement has to be taken as a wish for a continuous slowdown in global air pollutant emissions. An exposure-response relationship has previously been described for PM2.5 and OHCA [10], but no dose-response curve has been ever found for all of the pollutants that we examined. Although the specific physiological effects of each of these pollutants is not fully understood at this time, cardiovascular health effects are gradually being established with controlled human and animal toxicological studies [9]. Similar mechanisms can be surmised to be responsible for respiratory disease caused by air pollution as well. Moreover, the health outcomes for CV and respiratory diseases associated with ambient air pollution are often overlapping in their aetiology and symptoms, and these two major groups of pathologies are often comorbid conditions. For this reason, and for consistency with the 2014 Utstein style, we have decided to include all OHCA with presumptive medical aetiology, with no distinction between cardiac and respiratory causes, and to exclude cardiac arrests caused by external causes such as drowning, trauma, asphyxia, electrocution and drug overdose.

Importantly, this study has also demonstrated that the daily cumulative concentration of all seven pollutants influenced the percentage of OHCA occurring on the same day. This is in line with a recent meta-analysis, which assessed the effect of pollutant exposure with a distributed lag model [11] suggesting that the mean concentration of the current day and the previous day, which is alike our mean daily concentration from midnight to midnight, had the strongest estimated effect on OHCA risk of all of the lag patterns examined. This can be further interpreted to suggest that the cumulative short-term exposure to pollutants has a greater impact on OHCA risk than any lag pattern examined in previous studies. However, this meta-analysis confirmed a significant association only between short-term exposure to PM2.5, PM10 and O3 and OHCA.

Several discrepancies can be found in literature regarding the effects of specific pollutants on CV health: acceptably robust data is present regarding particulate matter, while for gaseous pollutants, such as O3, NO2, Benzene, CO, and SO2, the role in cardiovascular toxicity must still be better assessed. In a systematic review [11] based on 15 different studies conducted in North America, Europe, Australia and Asia, the association between the incidence of OHCA and SO2 and CO were not found to be statistically significant. Also, in contrast to a large study conducted in Seoul [10], in which O3 had no significant association with OHCA risk, a study conducted in Stockholm [12] demonstrated a significant association for O3, but not for PM2.5 and NO2. By using a lagged exposure model, a recent study in Japan found that PM2.5, CO, Ox and SO2 were associated with higher risk of all-cause OHCA, while NO2. was not [13] The reason why such a discrepancy might exist may be attributable to the differences existing in local climatic and socioeconomic conditions, demographic features and methodologies in which the studies were chosen to be conducted. Our significant results for all pollutants might be due to the high average concentrations of pollutants in the area of the study, one of the most polluted in Europe. The median value of PM2.5 that we found in days with high incidence of OHCA was 21.1 μg/m3, in contrast to 8.7 μg/m3, 12 μg/m3, and 4.8 μg/m3 in Copenhagen, New York, and Melbourne, respectively. Another possible explanation for these differences in significance are differences in the prevalence of CVD, OHCA susceptibility and population age. Data from the WHO show that the mean European population age is amongst the highest in the world and Italy has one of the oldest populations in Europe. This means that we studied not only one of most polluted areas in the world but also one of the oldest, where pre-existing health conditions are also more likely to be frequent. Importantly, the correction for day-to-day concentration change, which we have applied in the multivariate logistic regression analysis, emphasizes that regardless of trends in pollution concentrations, it is the absolute dose on the current day which most affects OHCA risk and not the relative variation of concentration compared to the previous day. This also implies that the reduction of air pollution is expected to produce immediate improvements in health outcomes and not just for future generations, which has major potential implications on cost–benefit analyses.

We have confirmed that meteorological factors have to be taken into account when speaking about air pollution. As in other studies [1416], we have demonstrated an inverse relationship between temperature and OHCA incidence by showing increases in wintertime. Conversely, relative humidity was found to have a neutral role, possibly due to its lower variability in the study territory compared to other areas where it has been studied, and found to be a risk factor for OHCA [17]. The correction of the analysis for the temperature was crucial. In univariable analysis and in the Probit regression dose-response model, SO2 initially did not appear to be associated with acute OHCA risk and O3 showed a presumptive protective effect. More specifically, days with higher atmospheric concentrations of O3 were associated with a lower incidence of OHCA, falsely suggesting that O3 could have protective effects regarding OHCA risk. As shown in Fig 2, the majority of pollutants are present in increased concentrations during colder seasons because of home heating, increased use of transport vehicles and industrial activities. O3 differs from this pattern and notably reaches higher atmospheric concentrations during the warmer months of the summer when the influence of direct sunlight is also the greatest. For this reason, we repeated our analysis after correction for temperature, humidity and day-to-day concentration changes and, after doing so, we unmasked the negative effect of O3 and strengthened the correlation of all other pollutants, mainly of SO2, which was found to have the strongest association [OR 4.1 (95% CI 2.2–7.8), p<0.001]. A study in Milan [18] has recently also demonstrated a synergistic effect between exposure to PM10 and temperature. We believe that the interaction between air pollution and temperature deserves additional in-depth analysis, especially in a world in which climate change and global warming have become every-day topics affecting social behaviour and politics.

Currently, ambient air pollution is considered one of the greatest global health risks, causing significant loss of life expectancy, especially through cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease and cancer. It has been known for quite some time that the impact of inhaled pollution is more than just a pulmonary concern. At present, we know that some gases, such as NO and CO, are readily taken up into the circulation, while particulate matter, such as PM2.5 and PM10, are first filtered by the lungs [19]. In fact, acute air pollutant exposure has been demonstrated to increase the relative risk of hospitalization for heart failure, acute coronary syndromes, acute myocardial infarction (AMI) [20], cardiac arrhythmias, such as atrial fibrillation, and CVD mortality. A study conducted in Helsinki [21] suggested that air pollution triggers OHCA via two distinct modes: one associated with particulates leading to AMI and one associated with O3 involving etiologies other than AMI, for example, arrhythmias or respiratory insufficiency. In the interim, numerous studies have tried to elucidate the physiological and molecular mechanisms involved, mostly focusing on oxidative stress, inflammation, and endothelial and autonomic dysfunction. For example, after acute O3 exposure, alterations in heart variability and in QT duration, an increase of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as Interleukin-8 and Plasminogen activator-1 [22, 23], and an imbalance of autonomic components have all been noted [24]. Experiments have also found that acute PM2.5 exposure can cause cardiac ischemia by crossing the alveolar-epithelial barrier into the circulation to affect cardiovascular function. In humans, controlled exposure of concentrated PM and to ozone led to brachial artery constriction, while CO has been noted to have the ability to induce right ventricular disfunction and pulmonary arterial hypertension [19]. Chronic exposure was similarly found to be related to an increase of individual cardio-metabolic risk due to epigenetic changes, including methylation, which affects transcriptional activity [25].

Since exposure to air pollutants is a modifiable factor that contributes to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, the reduction of air pollution emissions is a valid strategy of primary prevention of CV disease and OHCA. However, due to the prevalence of other risk factors and existing differences in health care in other countries, it is difficult to assess the real magnitude of the benefits of such reduction.

Just as genetics, lifestyle and diet have a well-established role in CVD, environmental pollution is now playing an increasingly important role as well. In an era of precision medicine, air pollution exposure assessment may have a role in predicting OHCA susceptibility, especially for patients affected by other comorbidities [26]. The warning during high-polluted days should be addressed to these people in particular, even if to date there is no evidence about the role of previous hospitalizations in modifying the association between the risk of OHCA and short-term increases in pollutant concentration [27]. By using a lagged exposure model, a recent study in Japan found that PM2.5, CO, Ox and SO2 were associated with higher risk of all-cause OHCA, while NO2. was apparently found to be protective with OHCA incidence), and no differences in both sexes. [13]. In contrast to this, another study in Japan found that men were more susceptible than women [28] and in Singapore no clear evidence of increased susceptibility was found in elderly people as well as for people with cardiac history, diabetes mellitus or hypertension [20].

Ambulance service should also be planned accordingly on highly-polluted days since high pollution levels increases the demands of emergency services [29, 30]. The response speed of ambulance calls is very crucial to rescue patients having OHCA. Having more ambulances or EMS-professionals available in accordance with weather forecast and pollution monitoring could be useful in saving more lives. In a recent meta-analysis conducted in the UK [31], air pollution was significantly associated with an increase in ambulance dispatches, including those for cardiac arrest, asthma and other respiratory causes. A French study [32] examined the effects of short-term exposure to air pollution on the incidence of Mobile Intensive Care Unit (MICU) activation for cardiac arrest and it found a significant association between the increase of PM2.5 and Ozone and the increased activation of MICUs for OHCA. Hence, air pollution monitoring could improve OHCA detection, response and care in transit. When high concentrations of pollutants are expected, more EMS resources should be available, which would lead to a more rapid dispatching of assistance and thus a more effective chain of actions leading to early cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Low-cost air pollution sensors may also be a future option to help reduce air pollution exposure and real-time measuring could be integrated in mathematical model for event prediction. These interventions could help in rendering the EMS model more efficient in order to optimize the prompt treatment of OHCA.

Some limitations should be addressed regarding this study. First, the 1-year time period in which this study was conducted may be insufficient to lead us to make general conclusions, especially towards finding a specific acceptable threshold level for the concentrations of individual pollutants. Second, the data used in this study comes from one of the most polluted areas of Europe, which might result in an overestimation of the influence of pollution on OHCA risk. Third, due to the lack of measurable biomarkers directly correlated to the individual exposure to the ambient pollutants, we have used air pollutant monitoring data, which might not represent actual exposure. Fourth, our register only documents where the OHCA occurred and patients’ true exposure to pollutants may better correlate to other areas. However, the majority of the OHCA occurred at home and it is reasonable to think that those who have had OHCA in location other than home live in the same study area. Considering this, we believe that this aspect could only modestly affect our results. The current methodology also may not have captured the cumulative effects of the exposure or other effects derived from long-term exposure since it did not take lag effects into account. Pre-existing individual comorbidities were not accounted for, which might affect OHCA risk.

Conclusions

A significant dose-response relationship was found for all seven of the pollutants studied and OHCAs, which provides important information to protect public health. All the pollutants have been demonstrated to have a strong association with OHCA incidence, independently from their day-to-day concentration changes and daily meteorological data. We truly wish for a time in which air pollutants monitoring can serve as a tool to better assess personal risk for OHCA and also to improve the general health service efficiency by being factored into ambulance forecast models and warning systems, both contributing to a reduction in OHCAs.

Supporting information

S1 Table. Summary characteristics for study population with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

(DOCX)

S1 Dataset. The study dataset of fully anonymized data.

(XLSX)

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank all the Lombardia CARe researchers, all the EMS personnel and a special thank you to Guido Giuseppe Lanzani and Orietta Cazzuli for ARPA Lombardia.

SS, EB and EC are members of the European Resuscitation Council Research-Net.

Lombardia CARe researchers: Antonio Cuzzoli, Andrea Pagliosa, Guido Matiz, Alessandra Russo, Andrea Lorenzo Vecchi, Cecilia Fantoni, Pierpaolo Parogni, Cristian Fava, Cinzia Franzosi, Claudio Vimercati, Dario Franchi, Enrico Storti, Ugo Rizzi, Simone Ruggeri, Erika Taravelli, Fulvio Giovenzana, Giovanni Buetto, Guido Francesco Villa, Marco Botteri, Salvatore Ivan Caico, Giuseppe Bergamini, Irene Raimondi Cominesi, Livio Carnevale, Matteo Caresani, Mario Luppi, Maurizio Migliori, Paola Centineo, Paola Genoni, Roberta Bertona, Roberto De Ponti, Stefano Buratti, Gian Battista Danzi, Arianna Marioni, Alessandra Palo, Antonella De Pirro, Simone Molinari, Vito Sgromo, Valeria Musella, Martina Paglino, Francesco Mojoli, Bruno Lusona, Michele Pagani, Moreno Curti, Catherine Klersy, Sabina Campi, Battistina Castiglioni, Umberto Piccolo, Marco Cazzaniga, Ilaria Passarelli, Giovanna Perone, Gianluca Panni, Daniele Ghiraldin, Luca Bettari, Luigi Moschini, Laura Zanotti.

Data Availability

All relevant data are within the manuscript and its S1 Dataset files.

Funding Statement

We did not receive any specific funding for this work.

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Decision Letter 0

Elena Cavarretta

2 Jun 2021

PONE-D-21-14468

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and ambient air pollution: a dose-effect relationship and a predictive role in OHCA risk.

PLOS ONE

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Reviewers' comments:

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Comments to the Author

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Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

**********

2. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

**********

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The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: No

**********

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Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

**********

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Reviewer #1: Authors have established statistically significant correlations between concentrations of air pollutants and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. These correlations appear to follow a dose-response curve between concentration and number of events.

The quality of the writing is very good and the conclusions of the authors are sound. The discussion is well thought out. There are some easily modifiable points that can be addressed prior to publication:

1. The figures are of very low quality and should be replaced. Tables are fine.

2. In the regression analyses, presumably the concentrations published are the average over the course of 24 hours (but the y axis of these dose responses is not readable). Was there time-of-day data exposure available? Since cardiovascular events are somewhat rhythmically controlled, it would be interesting to see if these dose-responses were robust enough to correlate with hourly pollutant concentrations. If this is data is not available, perhaps only a brief mention of how the pollutant concentrations were reported.

3. Typo: (first paragraph of Air pollution and incidence of OHCA) ...was still statically significant (Figure 2)... ---> statistically significant

Reviewer #2: Introduction

- "look for a dose-effect curve" sounds very awkward, pls rephrase

Methods

- "A correlation between the mean concentrations of every pollutant among the four provinces was tested via a multivariable regression model.": Pls clarify how does this model work? How did you use a multivariable model to ascertain "correlation" between covariates?

- "We also ran a multivariable logistic model testing the predictive

power of every single pollutant corrected for temperature, daily concentration change and relative humidity": I think the logistic model when implemented in the manner you described, can inform on STRENGTH OF ASSOCIATION, not PREDICTIVE POWER.

- How did you account for seasonality? This is especially important for a 1-year study.

Results

- "R-values": I assume this is pearson's r correlation coefficient? It is confusing to state it as "R-value"

- Fig 2 & 4 are very blurry. I can't make out the words. I will need to examine again when clearer versions are provided.

Discussion

- limitations: the limitation of this simple log regression modelling approach, rather than standards in thie field eg DLNM need to be specified. for example, the inability to account for lag effects will lead to high risk of misclassification of dose-reponse. we know that the lag-specific risk for these pollutants are non-linear and often can be protective at some lag and harmful at some lag. this is a severe limitation of this study.

- Literature review: the discussion will be much improved by the inclusion of below literature

Ho, A. F. W. et al. Health impacts of the Southeast Asian haze problem – A time-stratified case crossover study of the relationship between ambient air pollution and sudden cardiac deaths in Singapore. International Journal of Cardiology 271, 352–358 (2018).

Kojima, S. et al. Association of Fine Particulate Matter Exposure With Bystander-Witnessed Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest of Cardiac Origin in Japan. JAMA Netw Open 3, e203043–e203043 (2020).

Ho, A. F. W. et al. Time‐Stratified Case Crossover Study of the Association of Outdoor Ambient Air Pollution With the Risk of Acute Myocardial Infarction in the Context of Seasonal Exposure to the Southeast Asian Haze Problem. JAHA 8, (2019).

Zhao, B., Johnston, F. H., Salimi, F., Kurabayashi, M. & Negishi, K. Short-term exposure to ambient fine particulate matter and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a nationwide case-crossover study in Japan. The Lancet Planetary Health 4, e15–e23 (2020).

**********

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Reviewer #2: No

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PLoS One. 2021 Aug 25;16(8):e0256526. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0256526.r002

Author response to Decision Letter 0


13 Jul 2021

We thank the Editor and the Reviewers for their comments and their criticisms which helped us to improve the clarity and the quality of the manuscript.

Following is a point-by-point reply to the comments.

Journal Requirements:

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https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=ba62/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_title_authors_affiliations.pdf

A1: We fixed the style requirements including heading, citations, figures, tables based on the PLOS ONE style templates.

2. Please review your reference list to ensure that it is complete and correct. If you have cited papers that have been retracted, please include the rationale for doing so in the manuscript text, or remove these references and replace them with relevant current references. Any changes to the reference list should be mentioned in the rebuttal letter that accompanies your revised manuscript. If you need to cite a retracted article, indicate the article’s retracted status in the References list and also include a citation and full reference for the retraction notice.

A2:We did not retract any papers. The only changes we have made to the reference list was made in consideration to the suggestion made by the Reviewer #2. In fact, we added 3 papers out of the 4 suggested.

3. Thank you for stating the following in the Funding Section of your manuscript:

"Lombardia CARe is partially funded by the Fondazione Banca del Monte di Lombardia. Dr Baldi’s salary was partially

funded by grant 733381 from the European Union Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program of ESCAPE-NET.

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript."

We note that you have provided funding information that is not currently declared in your Funding Statement. However, funding information should not appear in the Acknowledgments section or other areas of your manuscript. We will only publish funding information present in the Funding Statement section of the online submission form.

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A3:We are sorry for the inconvenience. We removed the funding-related text from the manuscript. The Funding statement should be the one stated in the Acknowledgments section. We will include it within the new cover letter.

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A4: Thank you very much for your observation. At the time of the submission, we have probably misunderstood and made a mistake. In fact, we would like all the Lombardia CARe researchers to be listed in PubMed as done in a previous work (PLoS One. 2020 Oct 22;15(10):e0241028. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241028. PMID: 33091034; PMCID: PMC7580972). The complete list of the researchers is in the acknowledgment section.

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b) If you are unable to obtain permission from the original copyright holder to publish these figures under the CC BY 4.0 license or if the copyright holder’s requirements are incompatible with the CC BY 4.0 license, please either i) remove the figure or ii)

supply a replacement figure that complies with the CC BY 4.0 license. Please check copyright information on all replacement figures and update the figure caption with source information. If applicable, please specify in the figure caption text when a figure is similar but not identical to the original image and is therefore for illustrative purposes only.

A5: As requested, the map has been created using “Tableau Public” which is a free platform that allows anyone to copy, distribute, and use every content created by their software. This uses map-sources such as OpenStreetMap® open data which is “licensed under the Open Data Commons Open Database License (ODbL) by the OpenStreetMap Foundation (OSMF)” and whose documentation “is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (CC BY-SA 2.0)”. https://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1-0/. As long as you credit OpenStreetMap and its contributors, everybody is free to “copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format” and to “remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially” https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/. We added this information both in the method section and in the figure caption.

6. Please include captions for your Supporting Information files at the end of your manuscript, and update any in-text citations to match accordingly. Please see our Supporting Information guidelines for more information: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/supporting-information.

[Note: HTML markup is below. Please do not edit.]

Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

1. Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

________________________________________

2. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

________________________________________

3. Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: No

A6: You are right, the full database will be uploaded as a supplementary information.

________________________________________

4. Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

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Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

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5. Review Comments to the Author

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Reviewer #1: Authors have established statistically significant correlations between concentrations of air pollutants and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. These correlations appear to follow a dose-response curve between concentration and number of events.

The quality of the writing is very good and the conclusions of the authors are sound. The discussion is well thought out. There are some easily modifiable points that can be addressed prior to publication:

A1: Thank you very much for your kind appreciation.

1. The figures are of very low quality and should be replaced. Tables are fine.

A2: Thank you very much for your comment. We have now improved the quality of the figures and replaced them as suggested.

2. In the regression analyses, presumably the concentrations published are the average over the course of 24 hours (but the y axis of these dose responses is not readable). Was there time-of-day data exposure available? Since cardiovascular events are somewhat rhythmically controlled, it would be interesting to see if these dose-responses were robust enough to correlate with hourly pollutant concentrations. If this is data is not available, perhaps only a brief mention of how the pollutant concentrations were reported.

A3: You are right in saying that in the regression analysis was entered the mean value of the day (over the course of 24 hours). As stated in the method sections: “daily concentration of both PM10 and PM2.5… hourly concentrations were provided…for NO2, …CO,…Benzene, …O3 and …SO2.” Concerning the idea of studying the hourly impact of the different pollutants, it was initially in our plans. However, we couldn’t perform this kind of analysis because not every station was able to provide the concentration of pollutants hourly. Infact, PM10 and PM2.5 were available only in daily concentrations.

3. Typo: (first paragraph of Air pollution and incidence of OHCA) ...was still statically significant (Figure 2)... ---> statistically significant

A4: Thank you very much, we fixed it.

Reviewer#2: Introduction

- "look for a dose-effect curve" sounds very awkward, pls rephrase

A1: As suggested, the sentence has been rephrased: “The secondary aim of this study is to search for and describe a dose-effect relationship, which could help predict OHCA incidence based on the concentration of pollutants in a specific area.”

Methods

- "A correlation between the mean concentrations of every pollutant among the four provinces was tested via a multivariable regression model.": Pls clarify how does this model work? How did you use a multivariable model to ascertain "correlation" between covariates?

A2: The reviewer is correct about this, and we have changed the term to “relationship” instead of correlation. We ran a multivariable regression model for each one of the pollutants and for both temperature and humidity, testing the relationship between the mean daily concentration of one province (dependent variable) with those of the other three (independent variables). What we found was a strong relationship and a good fit of the model with a “multiple correlation coefficient (R)” higher than 0.9 for all but one pollutant, and for temperature and humidity as well (Figure 2).

- "We also ran a multivariable logistic model testing the predictive

power of every single pollutant corrected for temperature, daily concentration change and relative humidity": I think the logistic model when implemented in the manner you described, can inform on STRENGTH OF ASSOCIATION, not PREDICTIVE POWER.

A3: We accepted the reviewer’ suggestion and we rephrased the sentence. According to this, we have also replaced the terms “predictor”, “predictive role” or similar with the more appropriate term “association”, both in the title of the study and along the entire text.

- How did you account for seasonality? This is especially important for a 1-year study.

A4: We found that the temperature was indirectly associated with the incidence of OHCA and this probably reflects the seasonality of OHCA incidence. In fact, during summer the incidence of OHCA was lower than in the cold months of the year. However, during spring and summer the grade of pollution was lower as well. This is the reason that we have corrected the analysis for temperature. After this correction, every pollutant tested demonstrated a statistically significant effect on OHCA incidence. The most impressive effects of such a correction were concerning O3 and SO2: the former demonstrated a harmful effect on OHCA incidence only after correcting for temperature and the latter was only found to be statistically significant (vs non-significant) after correction.

Results

- "R-values": I assume this is pearson's r correlation coefficient? It is confusing to state it as "R-value"

A5: The R-value represents the “multiple correlation coefficient” of the multivariable model. We have added this information both in the fig 2 caption and the text.

- Fig 2 & 4 are very blurry. I can't make out the words. I will need to examine again when clearer versions are provided.

A6: We have now improved the quality of the figures and replaced them as suggested.

Discussion

- limitations: the limitation of this simple log regression modelling approach, rather than standards in thie field eg DLNM need to be specified. for example, the inability to account for lag effects will lead to high risk of misclassification of dose-reponse. we know that the lag-specific risk for these pollutants are non-linear and often can be protective at some lag and harmful at some lag. this is a severe limitation of this study.

A7: The reviewer is correct in saying that we did not take into account the lag effect. We acknowledge and agree that a distributed lag non-linear model is the most used way to evaluate the short and delayed effects of each air pollutant on OHCA incidence. However, in our study the difference of the concentrations of single pollutants between the index day and the previous one (formerly named “daily change in concentration” and now, for being clearer, named “day-to-day concentration change” did not show any major differences reflecting a constant high degree of environmental pollution in the study territory. We focused our attention on the immediate effect of the level of pollutants on OHCA incidence by considering daily average exposure/concentration on the day of the OHCA. This choice was done after having considered that the effects of many pollutants reached the maximum values with a lag pattern of 0-1, then decreased as the lag time increased. Also, as lag time increases the values tend to become less robust and more heterogenous. As you have rightly said, the percentage risk increase result in higher or lower values thus creating an over- or under- estimation of the effect on OHCA incidence.

Aware of the limitation of our study model, we have also corrected the analysis for the variation of the concentrations between the index day and the day before. We are aware that our method can be limited by several factors, including the possibility to have not captured the cumulative effect of the exposure and the effects derived from long-term exposure. However, our results confirm those which others have described in the current literature and the dose-response curves were described. We have changed the limitations paragraph as suggested by the reviewer

- Literature review: the discussion will be much improved by the inclusion of below literature

Ho, A. F. W. et al. Health impacts of the Southeast Asian haze problem – A time-stratified case crossover study of the relationship between ambient air pollution and sudden cardiac deaths in Singapore. International Journal of Cardiology 271, 352–358 (2018).

Kojima, S. et al. Association of Fine Particulate Matter Exposure With Bystander-Witnessed Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest of Cardiac Origin in Japan. JAMA Netw Open 3, e203043–e203043 (2020).

Ho, A. F. W. et al. Time‐Stratified Case Crossover Study of the Association of Outdoor Ambient Air Pollution With the Risk of Acute Myocardial Infarction in the Context of Seasonal Exposure to the Southeast Asian Haze Problem. JAHA 8, (2019).

Zhao, B., Johnston, F. H., Salimi, F., Kurabayashi, M. & Negishi, K. Short-term exposure to ambient fine particulate matter and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a nationwide case-crossover study in Japan. The Lancet Planetary Health 4, e15–e23 (2020).

A8:Thank you very much for your advice. We have made little changes along the discussion by adding the suggested papers to the references list.

Attachment

Submitted filename: reply to reviewer 18-6-21.docx

Decision Letter 1

Elena Cavarretta

9 Aug 2021

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and ambient air pollution: a dose-effect relationship and an association with OHCA incidence.

PONE-D-21-14468R1

Dear Dr. Savastano,

We’re pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been judged scientifically suitable for publication and will be formally accepted for publication once it meets all outstanding technical requirements.

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Reviewer #1: The authors have addressed my comments sufficiently and made a good attempt for the other, more rigorous reviewer as well

Reviewer #2: My concerns were satisfactorily addressed. The updated figures, which were of higher resolution, were satisfactory.

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Acceptance letter

Elena Cavarretta

16 Aug 2021

PONE-D-21-14468R1

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and ambient air pollution: a dose-effect relationship and an association with OHCA incidence.

Dear Dr. Savastano:

I'm pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been deemed suitable for publication in PLOS ONE. Congratulations! Your manuscript is now with our production department.

If your institution or institutions have a press office, please let them know about your upcoming paper now to help maximize its impact. If they'll be preparing press materials, please inform our press team within the next 48 hours. Your manuscript will remain under strict press embargo until 2 pm Eastern Time on the date of publication. For more information please contact onepress@plos.org.

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on behalf of

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Associated Data

    This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

    Supplementary Materials

    S1 Table. Summary characteristics for study population with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

    (DOCX)

    S1 Dataset. The study dataset of fully anonymized data.

    (XLSX)

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: reply to reviewer 18-6-21.docx

    Data Availability Statement

    All relevant data are within the manuscript and its S1 Dataset files.


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