From foodconsumer.org
Mobile phone use linked to brain tumors –study
By Ben Wasserman - foodconsumer.org
Jan 30, 2007 - 4:22:18 PM
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Use of mobile phone may significantly raise the risk of brain
tumor in those who use this modern telecommunication tool for more than ten
years, a new epidemiological study suggests.
The Finnish study found that those who had regularly used
mobile phones for more than ten years were 40 percent more likely to develop
brain tumors known as gliomas on the side where they hold their phones.
Gliomas are the most common types of brain tumors, which
begin in glial cells. Glial cells are a type of cell that surrounds nerve cells
and holds them in place. Glial cells also insulate nerve cells from each other,
according to the National Institute of Cancer.
Previous studies are inconsistent in terms of the effect of mobile
phone use on the risk of brain tumors.
Results vary with factors including, but not limited to the selection of
subjects, duration of phone use, type of tumors, and consideration of other
risk factors.
Studies that did not include subjects who used mobile phone
for more than ten years often failed to find an association between use of
mobile phone and elevated risk of brain tumor. And those studies that included
subjects who used mobile phone for more than ten years were likely to find the association.
The current finding, published Jan. 17, 2007 online in the
International Journal of Cancer, is believed to be the second study to clearly
link an increased risk of specific types of brain tumors to long-term use of
mobile phone.
In the current study, Anna Lahkola from the radiation and
Nuclear Safety Authority in
Finland
and colleagues from other institutions compared 1,521 mobile phone users who
had had gliomas with 3,301 controls without tumors.
The researchers found that the association between use of
mobile phone and gliomas became significant only after the duration of use,
years since first use, cumulative number of calls or cumulative hours of use
were considered.
Among those who used a mobile phone for more than ten years,
the risk for developing a glioma on the side of the head where they held their
handset was nearly 40 percent higher than average users.
The finding meant that there is a possibility that long term
use of mobile phones may raise risk of brain tumors although the researchers
say a firm conclusion could be drawn only after further study is conducted.
A 2006 study led by researchers at the Swedish National
Institute for Working Life suggested that the risk of malignant brain tumors linked
to use of mobile phone could be much higher.
According to the study published in the International
Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, those who used mobile phone including
cell phones and cordless telephones for more than 2,000 hours in their life
time may be 240 percent more likely to have a malignant brain tumor or brain cancer
on the side of the head the phone was used.
In the study, Lennart Hardell, Michael Carlberg and Kjell
Hansson Mild analyzed pooled data from two case-control studies they did
earlier of 905 cases of malignant brain tumors diagnosed between 1997 and 2003,
and thousands of controls aged 20 to 80 years.
The researchers found that those who used analogue cellular
phones for more than 2,000 hours in their lifetime were 590 percent more likely
to develop malignant brain tumors compare with controls.
For those who used digital cellular phones for more than
2000 hours, the risk was raised by 270 percent and for those who used cordless
phones, the risk was increased by 130 percent compared to controls.
With all types of phones combined, the risk was raised by
just 140 percent.
In other words, those
who used any type pf mobile phone for more than 2,000 hours were 240 percent
more likely to develop brain cancer.
The highest risk was associated with use of analogue phone.
The association between phone use and risk of brain cancer was most significant
in those who used mobile phones for 2,000 hours in their lifetime.
Other than the duration of phone use, latency would also
make a difference.
For all malignant brain tumors with latency period of longer
than 10 years and in the highest exposure group, cumulative use of analogue
cellular telephones for more than 85 hours, the risk was raised by 200
percent.
For digital phones, cumulative use of digital phones for
more than 64 hours raised the risk by 180 percent compared to 230 percent for use
of cordless telephones for more than 195 hours.
Considering the same side of the head exposed to radiation (ipsilateral
exposure), the risk of high-grade astrocytoma, a type of glioma, was raised by 140
percent for analog phones, 130 percent for digital phones, and 100 percent for
cordless telephones.
The risk was highest among those users who were younger than
20 years, according to the researchers.
Hardell et al. suggested that the reason some early studies
failed to establish an association between elevated risk of brain cancer and
use of mobile phone was because they did not consider long-term use.
They said some of previous studies on brain
tumors from
USA (Muscat et
al. 2000; Inskip et al. 2001),
Denmark
(Johnansen et al. 2001), and
Finland
(Auvinen et al. 2002) did not report any case with more than ten-year latency
period for use of cellular phones.
The risk became evident when studies included subjects who
used mobile phone for more than ten years.
In a 2005 Swedish study by Lonn et al., an increased risk of glioma was
raised by 60 percent and the risk of meningioma, a type of brain tumor, was
increased by 30 percent for the same side exposure for more than ten
years.
But Lonn et al. also found on the other side of exposure, the
risk of brain tumors was somehow decreased.
Hardell et al. suggested that there were some problems with the
methodologies used in Lonn et al.’s study.
For instance, the number of cases was not the
same as recorded in the Swedish Cancer Registry.
Contradictory results were derived from Lonn et al.'s study,
part of the WHO Interphone study. Actually, all the results from the WHO
Interphone study, according to Hardell et al., led to the same conclusion that
use of mobile phone seemed to reduce the risk of glioma and high-grade glioma.
Hardell te al. suggested that the methodologies used by the Interphone
study must have problems because microwave radiation is unlikely to protect
against malignant brain tumors from a biological viewpoint.
However, the Interphone study did show a statistically
significant increased risk for acoustic neuroma for more-than-ten-year exposure
to a cellular phone on the same side. The risk was raised by 80 percent.
A scientist affiliated with foodconsumer.org said that results
from those short term studies should not be extended to those who used mobile
phones for more than ten years because brain tumor may not develop within ten years
after exposure to cell phone radiation.
The latency of brain cancer may explain why short term
studies failed to find an association between an elevated risk of brain cancer
and use of mobile phone.
Further readings:
Inskip PD et al. (2001) Cellular telephone use and brain
tumors. New Engl. J. Med. 344: 79-86.
Jonansen C et al. (2001) Cellular telephone and cancer -a
nationwide cohort study in
Denmark.
J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 93: 203-207.
Muscat JE et al. (2000) Handheld cellular telephone use and
risk of brain cancer. JAMA 284:3001-3007.
Lonn S et al. (2004) Mobile Phone use and the risk of
acoustic neuroma.
Epidemiology 15:
653-659.
Lonn S. et al. (2005) Long-term mobile phone use and brain
tumor risk. Am J. Epidemiol. 161: 526-535
Auvinen A et al. (2002) brain tumors and salivary gland
cancers among cellular telephone users. Epidemiology 13: 356-359
Christensen HC et al. (2005) Cellular telephone and risk for
brain tumors. A population-based, incident case-control study. Neurology 64:
1189-1195