A leucopoietic-arterial axis underlying the link between ambient air pollution and cardiovascular disease in humans
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Air pollution [i.e. particulate matter with diameter <2.5 μm (PM2.5)] is a risk factor for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). While PM2.5 promotes leucopoiesis and atherosclerotic inflammation in experimental models, it is unknown whether this occurs in humans. We tested in humans (a) whether PM2.5 associates with higher leucopoietic tissue activity and arterial inflammation (ArtI), (ii) whether these associations persist after accounting for the effects of potential confounders including socioeconomics, traffic noise, and risk factors, and (iii) whether these tissue effects mediate the association between air pollution and MACE.
Individuals (
Higher air pollution exposure associates with heightened leucopoietic activity and ArtI and independently predicts MACE through a biological pathway that includes higher leucopoietic activity and ArtI in series.
Contributors

Shady Abohashem
Author
Massachusetts General Hospital - Harvard Medical School Boston , United States of America

Michael T Osborne
Author

Tawseef Dar
Author

Nicki Naddaf
Author

Taimur Abbasi
Author

Ahmed Ghoneem
Author

Azar Radfar
Author

Tomas Patrich
Author

Blake Oberfeld
Author

Brian Tung
Author

Zahi A Fayad
Author

Sanjay Rajagopalan
Author

Ahmed Tawakol
Author



