학술논문

C‐reactive protein from dried blood spots: Application to household air pollution field studies.
Document Type
Article
Source
Indoor Air. Jan2020, Vol. 30 Issue 1, p24-30. 7p.
Subject
*INDOOR air pollution
*C-reactive protein
*DRIED blood spot testing
*AIRPORTS
*DISEASE risk factors
Language
ISSN
0905-6947
Abstract
Household air pollution (HAP) is estimated to be an important risk factor for cardiovascular disease, but little clinical evidence exists and collecting biomarkers of disease risk is difficult in low‐resource settings. Among 54 Nicaraguan women with woodburning cookstoves, we evaluated cross‐sectional associations between 48‐hour measures of HAP (eg, fine particulate matter, PM2.5) and C‐reactive protein (CRP) via dried blood spots; secondary analyses included seven additional biomarkers of systemic injury and inflammation. We conducted sub‐studies to calculate the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) in biomarkers collected over four consecutive days in Nicaragua and to assess the validity of measuring biomarkers in dried blood by calculating the correlation with paired venous‐drawn samples in Colorado. Measures of HAP were associated with CRP (eg, a 25% increase in indoor PM2.5 was associated with a 7.4% increase in CRP [95% confidence interval: 0.7, 14.5]). Most of the variability in CRP concentrations over the 4‐day period was between‐person (ICC: 0.88), and CRP concentrations were highly correlated between paired dried blood and venous‐drawn serum (Spearman ρ =.96). Results for secondary biomarkers were primarily consistent with null associations, and the sub‐study ICCs and correlations were lower. Assessing CRP via dried blood spots provides a feasible approach to elucidate the association between HAP and cardiovascular disease risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]