Latest Study Finds No Increase in Risk of Brain Tumors
By UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
Longstanding fears that using mobile phones may increase the risk of developing a brain tumor have been reignited recently by the launch of 5G (fifth generation) mobile wireless technologies. Mobile phones emit radiofrequency waves which, if absorbed by tissues, can cause heating and damage.
Since mobile phones are held close to the head, the radiofrequency waves they emit penetrate several centimeters into the brain, with the temporal and parietal lobes being most exposed.
This has led to concern that mobile phone users may be at an increased risk of developing brain tumors, with the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifying radiofrequency waves as ‘possibly carcinogenic.’
However,
most of the studies that have investigated this question to date have been
retrospective studies in which individuals report mobile phone use after a
diagnosis of cancer, meaning that the results may be biased.
Today, researchers from Oxford
Population Health and IARC have reported the results of a large UK prospective
study (a study in which participants are enrolled before they develop the
disease(s) in question) to investigate the association between mobile phone use
and brain tumor risk. The results are published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The researchers used data from the UK Million Women Study: an ongoing study which recruited one in four of all UK women born between 1935 and 1950. Around 776,000 participants completed questionnaires about their mobile phone usage in 2001; around half of these were surveyed again in 2011. The participants were then followed up for an average of 14 years through linkage to their NHS records.
Mobile phone use was examined in
relation to the risk of various specific types of brain tumor: glioma (a tumor
of the nervous system); acoustic neuroma (a tumor of the nerve connecting the
brain and inner ear); meningioma (a tumor of the membrane surrounding the
brain); and pituitary gland tumors. The researchers also investigated whether
mobile phone use was associated with the risk of eye tumors.
Key findings:
By 2011, almost 75% of women aged
between 60 and 64 years used a mobile phone, and just below 50% of those aged
between 75 and 79 years
Over the 14 year follow-up period,
3,268 (0.42%) of the women developed a brain tumor
There was no significant
difference in the risk of developing a brain tumor between those who had never
used a mobile phone, and mobile phone users. These included tumors in the
temporal and parietal lobes, which are the most exposed parts of the brain
There was also no difference in
the risk of developing glioma, acoustic neuroma, meningioma, pituitary tumors,
or eye tumors
There was no increase in the risk
of developing any of these types of tumors for those who used a mobile phone
daily, spoke for at least 20 minutes a week and/or had used a mobile phone for
over 10 years
The incidence of right-sided and
left-sided tumors was similar in mobile phone users, even though mobile phone
use tends to be considerably greater on the right than the left side
Co-investigator Kirstin Pirie from
Oxford Population Health’s Cancer Epidemiology Unit said: ‘These results
support the accumulating evidence that mobile phone use under usual conditions
does not increase brain tumor risk.’
Although the findings are
reassuring, it remains unclear whether the risks associated with mobile phone
use are different in those who use mobile phones considerably more than was
typical of women in this cohort. In this study, only 18% of phone-users
reported talking on a mobile phone for 30 minutes or more each week. Those who
use mobile phones for long durations can reduce their exposure to
radiofrequency waves by using hands-free kits or loudspeakers.
The study did not include children
or adolescents, but researchers elsewhere
have investigated the association between mobile phone use and brain tumor risk in
these groups, not finding any association.
Lead investigator Joachim Schüz
from IARC said: ‘Mobile technologies are improving all the time, so that the
more recent generations emit substantially lower output power. Nevertheless,
given the lack of evidence for heavy users, advising mobile phone users to
reduce unnecessary exposures remains a good precautionary approach.’
The study is published in Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Reference: “Cellular Telephone Use
and the Risk of Brain Tumors: Update of the UK Million Women Study” by Joachim
Schüz, PhD, Kirstin Pirie, MSc, Gillian K Reeves, PhD, Sarah Floud, PhD,
Valerie Beral, FRS, for the Million Women Study Collaborators, 29 March
2022, JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djac042
The study was funded by the UK
Medical Research Council and Cancer Research UK.