An international study links high
levels of cell phone use with an increased risk for glioma, one of the
deadliest forms of brain cancer. The
study, conducted by an international team of investigators, involved five
countries (Australia, Canada, France, Israel and New Zealand) using the
Interphone protocol (abstract here).
Compared with never regular cell
phone users, those with the highest cumulative call time had a 70% increased
glioma risk. Those with the highest
level of radio frequency (RF) exposure over 7 years prior to diagnosis had a
90% increased risk for glioma (odds ratio, OR = 1.91, 95% confidence interval =
1.05 – 3.47) and double the risk for meningioma (OR = 2.01, CI = 1.03 – 3.93),
another type of brain tumor. With cell phone
use starting 10 years prior to diagnosis, there was an almost three-fold
increase in glioma risk (OR = 2.80, CI = 1.13 – 6.94). All of these increases were statistically
significant.
This research confirms earlier
studies finding increased risk of glioma among cell phone users, with brain
tumors occurring in as little as 7 years after exposure. Some might conclude that children who accumulate
high call-time and radio frequency exposures are at especially high risk; they
would cite this data to support a ban on cell phone use by children, and limits
on adult use.
But is that a legitimate interpretation
and application of the data?
The results in the second paragraph
above are entirely accurate, but these are only a few of the many ORs that were produced in the extensive study. The authors put their findings in
perspective:
“There were suggestions of an increased risk of glioma in
long-term mobile phone users with high RF exposure and of similar, but
apparently much smaller, increases in meningioma risk. The uncertainty of these
results requires that they be replicated before a causal interpretation can be
made.”
The conclusions in the third paragraph above about
children are, therefore, hyperbolic and indefensible. While the investigators did
find some modest risk, they recommended further investigation, not a cell phone
ban.
This study is relevant to tobacco harm reduction in
several ways.
The risk estimates for diseases related to long-term smokeless
tobacco use are similar to the risks for cell phones. As I discussed previously, while smokeless
tobacco use cannot be proven to be absolutely safe, risk elevations for cancers
(discussed here), as well as heart disease and stroke (here) are modest and usually not statistically significant.
Elevated risks seen in the Interphone study do not justify
the prediction of a cell phone-driven brain cancer epidemic. That sort of leap for smokeless use, however,
is not uncommon. Surgeon General Antonia
Novello in 1992 predicted “an oral cancer epidemic beginning two or three
decades from now if the current trends in spit tobacco use continue.” (article
here). Two decades later, we see increased smokeless
tobacco consumption, but no oral cancer epidemic.
While the Interphone study results were consistent with
prior research, the investigators did not call for drastic action to prevent
cell phone use. In contrast, questionable
findings by the American Cancer Society (discussed here) and the Karolinska Institute (here) have been used to justify a ban on snus in the European Union, and to
dissuade American smokers from switching to safer smoke-free substitutes.
The Interphone results suggest that heavy cell phone users
might want to consider a “harm reduction” measure: use of a Bluetooth headset. This
is comparable to recommending smokeless tobacco use to smokers. Although there is no evidence that Bluetooth headsets
are perfectly safe, they generally operate at lower radiated output power than
cell phones, and therefore expose the user’s brain to lower RF doses than do
cell phones.
Cell phones, like tobacco, are fixtures of modern
society. Their safe use is informed by responsibly
conducted and interpreted epidemiologic studies, and guided by the principles
of harm reduction.
1 comment:
Great post! It should also be pointed out that cell phones use the same type of rechargeable lithium batteries that are used in SmokefreE-cigarettes that have potential to cause injury if they are misused. Obviously this is not a major risk, but it validates the comparability.
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