Abstract

BackgroundGrowing evidence links household air pollution exposure from biomass-burning cookstoves to cardiometabolic disease risk. Few randomized controlled interventions of cookstoves (biomass or otherwise) have quantitatively characterized changes in exposure and indicators of cardiometabolic health, a growing and understudied burden in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Ideally, the solution is to transition households to clean cooking, such as with electric or liquefied petroleum gas stoves; however, those unable to afford or to access these options will continue to burn biomass for the foreseeable future. Wood-burning cookstove designs such as the Justa (incorporating an engineered combustion zone and chimney) have the potential to substantially reduce air pollution exposures. Previous cookstove intervention studies have been limited by stove types that did not substantially reduce exposures and/or by low cookstove adoption and sustained use, and few studies have incorporated community-engaged approaches to enhance the intervention.Methods/designWe conducted an individual-level, stepped-wedge randomized controlled trial with the Justa cookstove intervention in rural Honduras. We enrolled 230 female primary cooks who were not pregnant, non-smoking, aged 24–59 years old, and used traditional wood-burning cookstoves at baseline. A community advisory board guided survey development and communication with participants, including recruitment and retention strategies. Over a 3-year study period, participants completed 6 study visits approximately 6 months apart. Half of the women received the Justa after visit 2 and half after visit 4. At each visit, we measured 24-h gravimetric personal and kitchen fine particulate matter (PM2.5) concentrations, qualitative and quantitative cookstove use and adoption metrics, and indicators of cardiometabolic health. The primary health endpoints were blood pressure, C-reactive protein, and glycated hemoglobin. Overall study goals are to explore barriers and enablers of new cookstove adoption and sustained use, compare health endpoints by assigned cookstove type, and explore the exposure-response associations between PM2.5 and indicators of cardiometabolic health.DiscussionThis trial, utilizing an economically feasible, community-vetted cookstove and evaluating endpoints relevant for the major causes of morbidity and mortality in LMICs, will provide critical information for household air pollution stakeholders globally.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT02658383, posted January 18, 2016, field work completed May 2018. Official title, “Community-Based Participatory Research: A Tool to Advance Cookstove Interventions.” Principal Investigator Maggie L. Clark, Ph.D. Last update posted July 12, 2018.

Highlights

  • Growing evidence links household air pollution exposure from biomass-burning cookstoves to cardiometabolic disease risk

  • The combustion of biomass fuel in inefficient and poorly vented cookstoves creates a complex mixture of pollutants, which includes particulate matter (PM), carbon monoxide, volatile organic compounds, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and nitrogen oxides [2, 3]

  • Households cooking with biomass fuels experience PM2.5 levels 10 to 50 times higher than the World Health Organization’s current guideline of 25 μg/m3 for a 24-h mean [4, 5]

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Summary

Introduction

Growing evidence links household air pollution exposure from biomass-burning cookstoves to cardiometabolic disease risk. Wood-burning cookstove designs such as the Justa (incorporating an engineered combustion zone and chimney) have the potential to substantially reduce air pollution exposures. Despite being a leading risk factor for morbidity and mortality worldwide, a complete understanding of the burden from household air pollution is unknown, as only a limited number of health outcomes are included in global burden estimates. Growing evidence links household air pollution with increased risk for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) through potential inflammatory and oxidative stress pathways [7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. Further investigation is needed to more accurately characterize the burden of disease from household air pollution, its impact on cardiometabolic diseases, which are among the leading causes of global morbidity and mortality [6]

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