PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Schikowski, Tamara AU - Mills, Inga C AU - Anderson, H Ross AU - Cohen, Aaron AU - Hansell, Anna AU - Kauffmann, Francine AU - Krämer, Ursula AU - Marcon, Alessandro AU - Perez, Laura AU - Sunyer, Jordi AU - Probst-Hensch, Nicole AU - Künzli, Nino TI - Ambient air pollution- a cause for COPD? AID - 10.1183/09031936.00100112 DP - 2013 Jan 01 TA - European Respiratory Journal PG - erj01001-2012 4099 - http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/early/2013/03/07/09031936.00100112.short 4100 - http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/early/2013/03/07/09031936.00100112.full AB - The role of ambient air pollution in the development of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is considered to be uncertain. We review the evidence in the light of recent studies.Eight morbidity and six mortality studies were identified. These were heterogeneous in design, characterization of exposure to air pollution, and methods of outcome definition. Six morbidity studies with objectively defined COPD (FEV1/FVC ratio) were cross-sectional analyses. One longitudinal study defined incidence of COPD as the first hospitalization due to COPD. However, neither mortality nor hospitalization studies can unambiguously distinguish acute from long-term effects on the development of the underlying patho-physiological changes.Most studies were based on within-communities exposure contrasts which mainly assess traffic-related air pollution. Overall, evidence of chronic effects of air pollution on the prevalence and incidence of COPD among adults was suggestive but not conclusive despite plausible biologic mechanisms and good evidence that air pollution affects lung development in childhood and triggers exacerbations in COPD patients. To fully integrate this evidence in the assessment, the life-time course of COPD should be better defined. Larger studies with longer follow-up periods, specific definitions of COPD phenotypes, and more refined and source-specific exposure assessments are needed.