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This study is a blinded randomized crossover efficacy trial (N=172 households consisting of 207 participants) of High Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) filtration in near-highway homes that lack mechanical air-handling systems. Households will be randomized to 30 days of either filtration or sham filtration followed by a 30 washout period with a subsequent 30-day period of the alternative assignment. Room air filters that are commercially available will be placed in the bedroom and living room of each home.
The investigators will measure UFP and PM2.5 concentrations in 20% of the homes during filtration and sham periods and assess personal exposure in a subset of participants. The investigators will also assess chemical composition of particulate air pollution in 10 homes/year for exploratory purposes that could lead to future lines of research. The primary health endpoints will be participants' hsCRP and peripheral blood pressure, measures that the investigators have used in multiple observational studies of UFP as well as in pilot filtration intervention studies. Secondary biological measures that contribute to understanding biological pathways will be IL-6 (inflammation), D-dimer (coagulation), metabolome, central pressure and arterial stiffness. The primary intention to treat analysis will compare outcomes between HEPA filtration to sham filtration. The investigators will have 80% power to detect a difference of 0.6 mg/L in change in hsCRP and a difference in reduction in systolic blood pressure of 3.5 mmHg compared to participants who receive no filtration. Having participants serve as their own controls in the within-subject comparisons of intervention effectiveness increases statistical power and eliminates the possibility of baseline imbalances in demographic and clinical characteristics. A social science evaluation will inform final adjustments to the investigators' approach at the start and also assess participant acceptance and experience with the intervention at the end. The investigators' primary innovation is that this will be the first near highway HEPA intervention trial that is large enough and careful enough to be policy-relevant.
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Specific Aims:
Specific Aim 1: To test the effect of HEPA filtration on markers of cardiovascular risk for adults who live near urban highways. 207 participants will be enrolled in a double blind, randomized crossover trial of 30-day periods with and without filtration separated by a 30-day wash out period. The intervention will be during colder months (Oct-Mar) when ambient UFP are elevated and windows tend to be closed, thereby allowing for maximization of the exposure contrast between HEPA and sham conditions. The investigators hypothesize that the HEPA filtration intervention will be associated with indications of improved health in the primary health outcomes: blood pressure (systolic, diastolic, and pulse pressure); and hsCRP (a measure of inflammation).
Specific Aim 2: To assess whether the intervention succeeded or failed in participant homes. To determine effectiveness of the filtration intervention, the investigators will 1) measure particle pollution levels inside and outside 20% of the homes, and 2) use quantitative surveys and open-ended questions to evaluate how participants interacted with the intervention.
Specific Aim 3: To assess biomarkers that can suggest biological pathways by which filtration affects cardiovascular risk. Study participants will be measured for IL-6 (inflammation), D-dimer (coagulation), central blood pressure, and arterial stiffness (endothelial dysfunction), which constitute key steps along the presumed biological pathways. The peripheral blood plasma of all participants will also undergo metabolome analysis to provide additional evidence of biological pathways. The investigators propose this to follow on an exciting recent study that used a similar approach 24, and preliminary metabolome analysis.
Exploratory Aims: To analyze particle composition. In a subset of homes (30 homes total, 10/year), the investigators will perform detailed physical and chemical analysis of PM1 (particles <1,000 nm) to inform future work on composition-dependent health impacts and filtration effectiveness for UFP. Also in a subset of homes, assess personal exposures for 24 participants. The scientific premise is that HEPA filtration in homes without mechanical ventilation systems can reduce UFP (and overall PM) levels leading to positive changes in biomarkers. The study design and approach are rigorous, using a double blind, randomized cross over trial. The investigators will also measure objective biomarkers of risk of cardiovascular disease. The primary innovation is that this will be the first HEPA intervention trial near highways that is large enough to rule in or out efficacy of stand-alone HEPA filters from traffic pollution
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156 participants in 2 patient groups
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Doug Brugge, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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