TY - JOUR
T1 - Mobile phone use, exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic field, and brain tumour
T2 - A case-control study
AU - Takebayashi, T.
AU - Varsier, N.
AU - Kikuchi, Y.
AU - Wake, K.
AU - Taki, M.
AU - Watanabe, S.
AU - Akiba, S.
AU - Yamaguchi, N.
N1 - Funding Information:
The study conducted in Japan was fully funded by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications of Japan. We appreciate with grateful cooperation of the surgeons and the staffs of the participating institutions.
PY - 2008/2/12
Y1 - 2008/2/12
N2 - In a case-control study in Japan of brain tumours in relation to mobile phone use, we used a novel approach for estimating the specific absorption rate (SAR) inside the tumour, taking account of spatial relationships between tumour localisation and intracranial radiofrequency distribution. Personal interviews were carried out with 88 patients with glioma, 132 with meningioma, and 102 with pituitary adenoma (322 cases in total), and with 683 individually matched controls. All maximal SAR values were below 0.1 W kg-1, far lower than the level at which thermal effects may occur, the adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for regular mobile phone users being 1.22 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.63-2.37) for glioma and 0.70 (0.42-1.16) for meningioma. When the maximal SAR value inside the tumour tissue was accounted for in the exposure indices, the overall OR was again not increased and there was no significant trend towards an increasing OR in relation to SAR-derived exposure indices. A non-significant increase in OR among glioma patients in the heavily exposed group may reflect recall bias.
AB - In a case-control study in Japan of brain tumours in relation to mobile phone use, we used a novel approach for estimating the specific absorption rate (SAR) inside the tumour, taking account of spatial relationships between tumour localisation and intracranial radiofrequency distribution. Personal interviews were carried out with 88 patients with glioma, 132 with meningioma, and 102 with pituitary adenoma (322 cases in total), and with 683 individually matched controls. All maximal SAR values were below 0.1 W kg-1, far lower than the level at which thermal effects may occur, the adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for regular mobile phone users being 1.22 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.63-2.37) for glioma and 0.70 (0.42-1.16) for meningioma. When the maximal SAR value inside the tumour tissue was accounted for in the exposure indices, the overall OR was again not increased and there was no significant trend towards an increasing OR in relation to SAR-derived exposure indices. A non-significant increase in OR among glioma patients in the heavily exposed group may reflect recall bias.
KW - Case-control study
KW - Epidemiology
KW - Glioma
KW - Meningioma
KW - Mobile phone
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U2 - 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604214
DO - 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604214
M3 - Article
C2 - 18256587
AN - SCOPUS:38949128342
SN - 0007-0920
VL - 98
SP - 652
EP - 659
JO - British Journal of Cancer
JF - British Journal of Cancer
IS - 3
ER -