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Spatial consistency of co-exposure to air and surface water pollution and cancer in China

Author

Listed:
  • Jingmei Jiang

    (Peking Union Medical College
    Peking Union Medical College)

  • Luwen Zhang

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Zixing Wang

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Wentao Gu

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Cuihong Yang

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Yubing Shen

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Jing Zhao

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Wei Han

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Yaoda Hu

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Fang Xue

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Wangyue Chen

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Xiaobo Guo

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Hairong Li

    (Chinese Academy of Sciences
    University of Chinese Academy of Sciences)

  • Peng Wu

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Yali Chen

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Yujie Zhao

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Jin Du

    (Peking Union Medical College)

  • Chengyu Jiang

    (Peking Union Medical College
    Institute of Basic Medical Sciences Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & School of Basic Medicine Peking Union Medical College)

Abstract

Humans can be exposed to multiple pollutants in the air and surface water. These environments are non-static, trans-boundary and correlated, creating a complex network, and significant challenges for research on environmental hazards, especially in real-world cancer research. This article reports on a large study (377 million people in 30 provinces of China) that evaluated the combined impact of air and surface water pollution on cancer. We formulate a spatial evaluation system and a common grading scale for co-pollution measurement, and validate assumptions that air and surface water environments are spatially connected and that cancers of different types tend to cluster in areas where these environments are poorer. We observe “dose–response” relationships in both the number of affected cancer types and the cancer incidence with an increase in degree of co-pollution. We estimate that 62,847 (7.4%) new cases of cancer registered in China in 2016 were attributable to air and surface water pollution, and the majority (69.7%) of these excess cases occurred in areas with the highest level of co-pollution. The findings clearly show that the environment cannot be considered as a set of separate entities. They also support the development of policies for cooperative environmental governance and disease prevention.

Suggested Citation

  • Jingmei Jiang & Luwen Zhang & Zixing Wang & Wentao Gu & Cuihong Yang & Yubing Shen & Jing Zhao & Wei Han & Yaoda Hu & Fang Xue & Wangyue Chen & Xiaobo Guo & Hairong Li & Peng Wu & Yali Chen & Yujie Zh, 2024. "Spatial consistency of co-exposure to air and surface water pollution and cancer in China," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-12, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:15:y:2024:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-024-52065-3
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-52065-3
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    References listed on IDEAS

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