It is official: Cellphones don’t up brain cancer risk
December 4th, 2009 - 1:03 pm ICT by ANI ( 1 comment )Washington, Dec 4 (ANI): Finally you can breathe a sigh of relief and continue chatting on your cellphone, for a 30-year study of just about everyone in Scandinavia has found no link between rising mobile use and rates of brain cancer.
According to the new brief communication published online December 3 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, there was no substantial change in brain tumor incidence among adults 5 to 10 years after cell phone usage sharply increased.
Although cell phone use has been proposed as a risk factor for brain tumors, a biological mechanism to explain this association is not known.
To reach the conclusion, Isabelle Deltour, Ph.D., of the Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, Danish Cancer Society, in Copenhagen, and colleagues analyzed annual incidence rates of glioma and meningioma among adults aged 20 to 79 years from Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden.
Researchers identified 60,000 patients who were diagnosed with these types of brain tumors between 1974 and 2003.
The researchers found that incidence rates over this 30 year-period were stable, decreased, or continued a gradual increase that started before the introduction of cell phones. They also found no change in incidence trends in brain tumors from 1998 to 2003.
The authors did not assess cell phone usage at the individual level during this time period, only brain tumor incidence.
“Because of the high prevalence of mobile phone exposure in this population and worldwide, longer follow-up of time trends in brain tumor incidence rates are warranted,” the authors write. (ANI)
- Cellphones don't cause brain cancer - Dec 04, 2009
- Mobile phone users face 'brain cancer pandemic' - Jun 15, 2010
- Fresh evidence links mobile phone use to brain tumours - Nov 02, 2010
- Mobile phones don't up brain cancer risk - Feb 18, 2011
- Mobile-phone use not linked to increased brain cancer risk - Feb 18, 2011
- Scientists pinpoint deadly brain tumor's origin - Jan 08, 2011
- Coffee or tea consumption may lower brain cancer risk - Oct 21, 2010
- Genetic change helps lung tumors spread to other parts of the body - Apr 07, 2011
- New technique diagnoses brain cancers non-invasively - Jan 29, 2012
- Scientists unlock genetics of kids' brain tumour - May 19, 2010
- Cancer warning on cell phones? - Apr 22, 2010
- Cell Phones And Pregnancy: A Curse For The Young Ones - Dec 08, 2010
- No conclusive link between cell phone use, cancer: Pulitzer winner - Apr 20, 2011
- Daffodils may harbour brain cancer cure - Nov 02, 2010
- New therapy shows promise against brain cancer - Feb 02, 2011
Tags: biological mechanism, brain cancer risk, brain tumor, brain tumors, cancer epidemiology, danish cancer society, denmark finland, glioma, incidence rates, incidence trends, isabelle, journal of the national cancer institute, meningioma, national cancer institute, quot, risk factor, sigh of relief, substantial change, time trends, types of brain tumors
January 14th, 2010 at 9:42 pm
I was in a class at work with 30 other people and 3 of them had recently had brain surgery. At break time we went outside and stood around. The 3 guys that had surgery in the previous 4 months immediately got on their cell phones and you could see the same type of scar about 2 inches above where the cell phone was planted on their ears. But you are right, I do not beleive for one minute cell phones had anything to do with it, because you just said so…