Ambient pollen exposure and pollen allergy symptom severity in the EPOCHAL study

Author:

Luyten Axel12ORCID,Bürgler Alexandra12ORCID,Glick Sarah12ORCID,Kwiatkowski Marek12ORCID,Gehrig Regula3ORCID,Beigi Minaya4,Hartmann Karin45ORCID,Eeftens Marloes12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute Allschwil Switzerland

2. University of Basel Basel Switzerland

3. Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss Zurich Switzerland

4. Division of Allergy, Department of Dermatology University Hospital Basel and University of Basel Basel Switzerland

5. Department of Biomedicine University Hospital Basel and University of Basel Basel Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAmbient pollen exposure causes nasal, ocular, and pulmonary symptoms in allergic individuals, but the shape of the exposure–response association is not well characterized. We evaluated this association and determined (1) whether symptom severity differs between subpopulations; (2) how the association changes over the course of the pollen season; and (3) which pollen exposure time lags affect symptoms.MethodsAdult study participants (n = 396) repeatedly scored severity of nasal, ocular, and pulmonary allergic symptoms, resulting in three composite symptom scores. We calculated hourly individually relevant pollen exposure to seven allergenic plants (alder, ash, birch, hazel, grasses, mugwort, and ragweed) considering personal sensitization and exposure time lags of up to 96 h. We fitted generalized additive mixed models, with a random personal intercept, adjusting for weather and air pollution as potential time‐varying confounders.ResultsWe identified a clear nonlinear positive association between pollen exposure and ocular and nasal symptom severity in the pollen allergy group: Symptom severity increased steeply with increasing exposure initially, but attenuated beyond approximately 80 pollen/m3. We found no evidence of an exposure threshold, below which no symptoms occur. While recent pollen exposure in the last approximately 5 h affected symptoms most, associations lingered for up to 60 h. Grass pollen exposure (compared to tree pollen) and younger age (18–30 years, as opposed to 30–65 years) were both associated with higher nasal and ocular symptom severity.ConclusionsThe lack of a threshold and attenuated dose–response curve may have implications for pollen warning systems, which may be revised to include multiday pollen concentrations in the future.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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