Litcius/Paper detail

Climate change, airborne allergens, and three translational mitigation approaches

Paul J. Beggs, Bernard Clot, Mikhail Sofiev, Fay H. Johnston

2023EBioMedicine58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One of the important adverse impacts of climate change on human health is increases in allergic respiratory diseases such as allergic rhinitis and asthma. This impact is via the effects of increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and air temperature on sources of airborne allergens such as pollen and fungal spores. This review describes these effects and then explores three translational mitigation approaches that may lead to improved health outcomes, with recent examples and developments highlighted. Impacts have already been observed on the seasonality, production and atmospheric concentration, allergenicity, and geographic distribution of airborne allergens, and these are projected to continue into the future. A technological revolution is underway that has the potential to advance patient management by better avoiding associated increased exposures, including automated real-time airborne allergen monitoring, airborne allergen forecasting and modelling, and smartphone apps for mitigating the health impacts of airborne allergens.

Topics & Concepts

Airborne allergenClimate changeAllergenEnvironmental scienceAsthmaHuman healthEnvironmental healthMedicineImmunologyAllergyEcologyBiologyAllergic Rhinitis and SensitizationAir Quality and Health ImpactsClimate Change and Health Impacts