This retrospective observational study found that chronic exposure to ambient level of carbon monoxide is associated with a shorter survival of glioblastoma patients (2‐3 months). Such association was validated in the cohorts of the United states (N=10621, HR 1.252, 95% CI 1.141‐1.373) and Korea (N=398, HR 2.874, 95% CI 1.040‐7.944).
Abstract
An increasing number of studies indicate air pollutants infiltrate into the brain. We aimed to find the association of cumulative air pollution exposure in the main body of primary brain tumor: glioblastoma (GBM). In this double‐cohort, retrospective analysis study with a protocol, we compared the health effect of air pollution on the GBM patients from the SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program) in 27 U.S. counties from 10 states and GBM patients of Severance cohort of Korea. From 2000 to 2015, 10621 GBM patients of the SEER were individually evaluated for the cumulative average exposure for each pollutant, and 9444 (88.9%) mortality events were reported. From 2011 to 2018, 398 GBM patients of the Severance with the same protocol showed 259 (65.1%) mortality events. The multi‐pollutant models show that the association level of risk with CO is increased in the SEER (HR 1.252; 95% CI 1.141‐1.373) with an increasing linear trend of relative death ra te in the spline curve. The Severance GBM data showed such a statistically significant result of the health impact of CO on GBM patients. The overall survival gain of the less exposure group against CO was 2 and 3 months in the two cohorts. Perioperative exposure to CO may increase the risk of shorter survival of GBM patients of the SEER and the Severance cohort.
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