Title Higher airborne pollen concentrations correlated with increased SARS-CoV-2 infection rates, as evidenced from 31 countries across the globe /
Authors Damialis, Athanasios ; Gilles, Stefanie ; Sofiev, Mikhail ; Sofieva, Viktoria ; Kolek, Franziska ; Bayr, Daniela ; Plaza, Maria ; Leier-Wirtz, Vivien ; Kaschuba, Sigrid ; Ziska, Lewis H ; Bielory, Leonard ; Makra, Laszlo ; Trigo, Maria del Mar
DOI 10.1073/pnas.2019034118
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Is Part of Proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the United States of America.. Washington : National Academy of Sciences. 2021, vol. 118, no. 12, art. no. e2019034118, p. [1-10].. ISSN 0027-8424. eISSN 1091-6490
Keywords [eng] COVID-19 ; pollen ; viral infection ; aerobiology
Abstract [eng] ollen exposure weakens the immunity against certain seasonal respiratory viruses by diminishing the antiviral interferon response. Here we investigate whether the same applies to the pandemic severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), which is sensitive to antiviral interferons, if infection waves coincide with high airborne pollen concentrations. Our original hypothesis was that more airborne pollen would lead to increases in infection rates. To examine this, we performed a crosssectional and longitudinal data analysis on SARS-CoV-2 infection, airborne pollen, and meteorological factors. Our dataset is the most comprehensive, largest possible worldwide from 130 stations, across 31 countries and five continents. To explicitly investigate the effects of social contact, we additionally considered population density of each study area, as well as lockdown effects, in all possible combinations: without any lockdown, with mixed lockdown−no lockdown regime, and under complete lockdown. We found that airborne pollen, sometimes in synergy with humidity and temperature, explained, on average, 44% of the infection rate variability. Infection rates increased after higher pollen concentrations most frequently during the four previous days. Without lockdown, an increase of pollen abundance by 100 pollen/m3 resulted in a 4% average increase of infection rates. Lockdown halved infection rates under similar pollen concentrations. As there can be no preventive measures against airborne pollen exposure, we suggest wide dissemination of pollen−virus coexposure dire effect information to encourage high-risk individuals to wear particle filter masks during high springtime pollen concentrations.
Published Washington : National Academy of Sciences
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2021
CC license CC license description