Relationship between Urban Green Spaces and Cancer: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Review question
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Protocol and Registration
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
- Type of population
- Types of outcome
- Types of study design
2.3. Information Sources
- -
- MEDLINE (via PubMed).
- -
- Green File (via EBSCO host).
- -
- Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (via EBSCO host).
- -
- ScienceDirect.
- Other sources
2.4. Search Strategy
2.5. Selection of Sources of Evidence
- Data extraction process
- Data items
- (1)
- Publication information (title, author and date of publication, journal, country);
- (2)
- Study characteristics (design, population of interest, aims and objectives of the studies);
- (3)
- Green space characteristics: type of green space, method used to characterize green space, factor related to green space that may have an effect on cancer;
- (4)
- Cancer outcomes: type of cancer measures reported (ex: reported number of skin cancer, number of breast cancer survival …)
- (5)
- Effects on cancer: types of cancer involved, relation to exposure (direct and/or indirect) and direction of findings for each study (risk, protection, no association);
- (6)
- Other links/relationships (issues that might be of interest addressed by the study).
2.6. Quality Appraisal of Included Studies
2.7. Analysis
2.8. Narrative Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Results of the Literature Search
- December 2017
- Update in May 2019
- Update in April 2020
3.2. Study Characteristics of Included Studies
- Green Space Characteristics
- Cancer related outcomes
3.3. Quality of Included Studies
3.4. Effects on Cancer Found in Studies
- Bladder cancer risk
- Breast cancer
- Skin cancer risk
- Lung cancer
- Larynx cancer risk
- Cancer mortality
- Carcinogenic risk
- Prostate cancer risk
3.5. Correlates/Effect Modifiers of Associate with Urban Green Spaces and Cancer
4. Discussion
4.1. Principal Findings: A Diversity of Exposure Modalities
4.2. Comparison with Previous Studies: Identification of Mediation Factors
4.3. Transferability: The Role of Contextual Variables
4.4. Quality of Evidence Reliability of this Scoping Review
4.5. Strengths and Limitations of this Scoping Review
4.6. Knowledge Gap and Future Research Perspectives
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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[34] | Kenborg et al. (2017) | Denmark | Cohort | 3124 (>35 years, men) | Greenhouses, nursery gardens, or public parks, gardens and cemeteries | Diagnoses of smoking-related cancers from national registers | ++ |
[35] | English et al. (2008) | Canada | Qualitative | 14 (adult and over 65, women) | Parks, open fields, and street trees, views of trees from a window, potted plants, and backyard gardens. | Cancer recovering | ++ |
[36] | Nakau et al. (2013) | Japan | Quasi experimental | 22 (adult and over 65, no gender specific) | The Japan World Exposition ’70 Commemorative Park | Cancer patients | - |
[37] | Hedges et al. (2010) | UK | Qualitative | 100 (adult, both sexes) | Two London parks | Skin cancer risk | + |
[38] | Keegan et al. (2014) | USA | Cohort | 4345 (adult and over 65, women) | Parks included beaches, recreation areas, and parks | Survival after diagnosis of breast cancer | + |
[39] | O’Callaghan-Gordo et al. (2018) | Spain | Case–control | 1129 breast cancer cases (adult and over 65, women) | Around each participant’s address of residence: Public green areas, gardens, zoos, parks, forests, tree canopy. | Risk of breast cancer | ++ |
[40] | Astell-Burt et al. (2014) | Australia | Cross-sectional | 267 000 (adult, over 65, no gender specific) | Public green spaces near residential area within 1km area | The prevalence of melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancer | + |
[41] | Bixby et al. (2015) | UK | Cross-sectional | 149 369 deaths (teenager, adult, both sexes) | % of Green spaces coverage of the 50 largest cities in England | Observed number of deaths from lung cancer | + |
[42] | Richardson et al. (2010) | New Zealand | Cohort | Over 1.5 million (teenager, adult, both sexes) | Natural areas (e.g., parks, beaches, and fields) but excluded aquatic areas (e.g., lakes and the sea) | Lung cancer mortality | + |
[43] | Richardson et al. (2012) | USA | Cross-sectional | 43 million (both sexes) | Green space coverage in each city | Lung cancer mortality | + |
[44] | James et al. (2016) | USA | Cohort | 108 630 ( adult and over 65, women) | Vegetation around each participant’s home address | cancer-specific mortality in the Nurses’ Health Study | ++ |
[45] | Ke et al. (2017) | China | Cross-sectional | Over 10 million (children and adult, no gender specific) | Public parks and playgrounds | Total cancer risk (TCR) | + |
[46] | Guney et al. (2010) | Turkey | Cross-sectional | 10 million (children, no gender specific) | Seventeen playgrounds (10 with treated wood, 4 with metal and 3 with plastic structures), 4 parks and 3 picnic areas | probabilistic carcinogenic risk for As uptake | + |
[47] | Zhang et al. (2016) | China | Cross-sectional | 21.6 million of residents | Four differents types of urban green spaces | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[48] | Mihankhah et al. (2020) | Iran | Cross-sectional | 13 million (children and adult) | Urban parks | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[49] | Brtnicky et al. (2018) | Czech Republic | Cross-sectional | Over 370 000 | Park | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[50] | Chen et al. (2013) | China | Cross-sectional | 31 million | Lake in urban green spaces (blue component) | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[51] | Frimpong et al. (2019) | Ghana | Cross-sectional | 57.6 % of the total population of Ghana | Public parks with passive recreation areas | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[52] | Gu et al. (2017) | China | Cross-sectional | Over 12 million (children and adult) | Parks | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[53] | Hiller et al. (2017) | Slovak Republic | Cross-sectional | 466 000 (children, no gender specific) | Playgrounds in Public kindergartens and urban parks soils | non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic health risks | + |
[54] | Demoury et al. (2017) | Canada | Case–control | 3 927 (adult and over 65, men) | Greenness measured within home buffers of 150 m, 300 m, 500 m and 1000 m | Prostate cancer risk | ++ |
[55] | Lu et al. (2019) | China | Cross-sectional | 7.5 million | Land-use nammed as green lands | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[56] | Wang et al. (2016) | China | Cross-sectional | 8.19 million (children and adult, no gender specific) | Parks in the center of Nanjing | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[57] | Xia et al. (2011) | China | Cross-sectional | 21.54 million of residents | Large public green space and classical garden | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[58] | Yang et al. (2018) | China | Cross-sectional | NA (children and adult) | Typical recreational garden | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[59] | Zhao et al. (2017) | China | Cross-sectional | 3.55 million | Urban parks | Carcinogenic risk | + |
[60] | Li et al. (2017) | China | Cross-sectional | Urban population of about 15.7 million | Park areas | Carcinogenic risks | + |
[61] | Richardson et al. (2010) | UK | Cross-sectional | 2,9 million of people (teenager and adult, both sexes) | Green spaces ranged from transport verges and neighbourhood greens, to parks, playing fields and woodlands. | Lung cancer mortality | + |
Effects | Risk | Protection | No Association |
---|---|---|---|
Bladder cancer risk | Indirect: [34] | ||
Breast cancer risk | Indirect: [34] | Direct: [39] Indirect: [35] | |
Skin cancer risk | Direct: [40] | Indirect: [37] | |
Lung cancer risk | Direct: [41,42,43,61] Indirect: [33,34] | ||
Larynx cancer risk | Indirect: [34] | ||
Non specific Cancer mortality | Direct: [44] | ||
Non-specific carcinogenic risk | Indirect: [45,46,47] | Indirect: [48] | Indirect: [49,50,51,52,53,55,56,57,58,59,60] |
Prostate cancer risk | Direct: [54] |
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Porcherie, M.; Linn, N.; Le Gall, A.R.; Thomas, M.-F.; Faure, E.; Rican, S.; Simos, J.; Cantoreggi, N.; Vaillant, Z.; Cambon, L.; et al. Relationship between Urban Green Spaces and Cancer: A Scoping Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 1751. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041751
Porcherie M, Linn N, Le Gall AR, Thomas M-F, Faure E, Rican S, Simos J, Cantoreggi N, Vaillant Z, Cambon L, et al. Relationship between Urban Green Spaces and Cancer: A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(4):1751. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041751
Chicago/Turabian StylePorcherie, Marion, Nyan Linn, Anne Roué Le Gall, Marie-Florence Thomas, Emmanuelle Faure, Stéphane Rican, Jean Simos, Nicola Cantoreggi, Zoé Vaillant, Linda Cambon, and et al. 2021. "Relationship between Urban Green Spaces and Cancer: A Scoping Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 4: 1751. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041751
APA StylePorcherie, M., Linn, N., Le Gall, A. R., Thomas, M. -F., Faure, E., Rican, S., Simos, J., Cantoreggi, N., Vaillant, Z., Cambon, L., & Regnaux, J. -P. (2021). Relationship between Urban Green Spaces and Cancer: A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(4), 1751. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041751