In addition, we have a visiting PhD student from China who has joined the project with own funding. Within this collaboration, we are conducting a systematic review into the cardiovascular health effects of airborne pollen exposure and intermittent allergic rhinitis is in progress. The review protocol has been registered in PROSPERO and we have published the systematic review protocol and related documents ahead of the manuscript on Zenodo. We will then proceed to data extraction and manuscript completion by fall 2023.
While the EPOCHAL cohort study had initially only proposed to measure respiratory health outcomes (lung function and airway inflammation) and self-reported symptoms, we expanded the range of health outcomes to include cardiac health (blood pressure, heart rate variability), cognitive performance (concentration, ) health-related quality of life (fatigue, ability to concentrate, mood, etc), sleep (quality and duration), thereby assessing a broader range of systemic health effects. This will allow us to ultimately present a more comprehensive picture of pre-clinical health as affected by airborne pollen exposure.
As a further next step, we will apply the spatiotemporal pollen model to estimate exposure for the Swiss National Cohort and national hospitalization statistics, in order to study the effects on mortality and hospitalization for cardiovascular and respiratory outcomes, in association with exposure to airborne pollen estimated at the individual address level.
Our team has been approached by multiple media (including popular television, radio, newspapers, professional magazines) to contribute research findings. Recently, we were approached by the popular Swiss television show SRF Puls, which is focused on health, and featured our EPOCHAL study in its 20 March 2023 episode. We also presented our research at five different conferences (in person and online, due to covid-19). The ISEE Young 2021 conference, which was hosted from Basel and co-organized by the grant holder Marloes Eeftens was a highlight. PhD student Alexandra Bürgler won 1st prize for “best speed talk” for her contribution “Effects of Pollen on Cardiorespiratory Health, Cognitive Performance and Allergic Symptoms”. Principal investigator, Marloes Eeftens has been invited to give talks to local Basel doctors association, the Swiss federal office for the environment, the World Health Organization, Public Health Zurich, Imperial College London, the Institute for Social and Preventive Medicine in Bern, and several others, which has generated quite some interest in the study.