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Study finds cell phones could cause noncancerous tumors

By Nancy McVicar 
Health Writer 
Posted October 14 2004 

People who have used cell phones for at least 10 years might have an
increased risk of developing a rare brain tumor, according to a study
published Wednesday in the international journal Epidemiology.

A team of researchers at Institute of Environmental Medicine at the
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, found almost a fourfold
increase of the tumors, known as acoustic neuromas, on the side of the
head where the phone was most often held.

The work was done as part of the World Health Organization's cell phone
research agenda, and experts in the field said it must be taken seriously
and is likely to rekindle consumer worries about the risks of using the
phones.

"The Karolinska researchers are respected around the world, and this
study will force health agencies to take a fresh look at mobile phone
risks," said Louis Slesin, publisher of Microwave News, who has been
covering the industry since its early days. "This study should put an end
to the industry's call to stop mobile phone health research."

At least one past study conducted for the cell phone industry also had
suggested a link between the phones and this type of tumor. But cell
phone industry officials on Wednesday said the Swedish research is only
one study and that no conclusions can be drawn from it.

The study, involving 150 acoustic neuroma patients and 600 healthy
people, is one of at least six studies of possible links between cell
phone use and acoustic neuromas. Most of those studies had fewer
long-term users than the Karolinska study.

Acoustic neuromas are slow-growing noncancerous tumors that develop on a
nerve linking the brain and the inner ear. The most common first symptom
is hearing loss, but as the tumor grows it can push against brain tissue.
If not treated, it can be life threatening. Such tumors are very rare,
occurring in about one person per 100,000 in the general population.

"It's a natural place to look [for a problem] because this is the area of
the head that is exposed," said Anders Ahlbom, director of the Institute
of Environmental Medicine at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. When
a cell phone is in use, it emits radio-frequency radiation, some of which
is absorbed in areas of the head closest to the handset.

To conduct the three-year study, the Karolinska researchers interviewed
people who had developed the tumors -- asking about their cell phone use,
how many different phones they had used, the makes and models, duration
of calls, whether they used a hands-free set and on which side of the
head they held the phone.

Researchers said they found no association between the tumors and the
amount of use measured in hours or cumulative number of calls, but rather
on the length of time those in the study had been regular users of cell
phones. Regular use was defined as an average of at least once a week
during six months or more.

Ahlbom said in a phone interview that the data are strong and
statistically significant, but the findings must be confirmed by
follow-up studies. He said the mechanism by which cell-phone radiation
might cause tumors remains unknown.

Dr. David Savitz, chairman of the department of epidemiology at the
University of North Carolina School of Public Health, Chapel Hill, said
the new findings "suggest something a little bit troublesome."

"It is significant in the sense that it is the first well-designed study
to show this," Savitz said. "There was an earlier study that came out,
but it didn't have as many people with long-term use."

Dr. Henry Lai, research professor of bioengineering at the University of
Washington in Seattle, also said the Karolinska study is not the first to
show a link between cell phones and acoustic neuromas.

"Another Swedish researcher, Dr. [Lennart] Hardell found similar results
in 2002," Lai said, "so this is, in effect, a replication. I think the
data are quite solid and are cause for concern on long-term cell phone
use."

Lai's own research found DNA breaks in the brain cells of animals exposed
to radio-frequency radiation, results that were first published in 1994,
and have been repeated by others, he said.

"We looked at DNA damage in animals, not in humans, and found that cell
phone radiation can damage DNA," he said. The body's immune system has
the ability to repair DNA breaks, but sometimes it can make a mistake and
cause a mutation, which could be the first step toward cancer, Lai said.

Sam Milham of Olympia, Wash., an epidemiologist and pioneer in studying
the effects of electromagnetic radiation on humans, said it usually takes
20 years or more for solid tumors to develop.

"I'm actually astonished that they found anything like this early,"
Milham said. "If that energy can do that to normal nerve tissue cells,
what can it do to adjacent brain cells? I think it's the tip of a big
iceberg, and the peak could be at 25 years past exposure.

"What's really alarming is that in the last five years an enormous number
of people started using cell phones, including kids, so I think this is
just the beginning of it. I hope I'm wrong."

According to the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association's
Web site, updated daily, there are more than 170 million wireless
subscribers in the United States.

The safety of cell phones was first called into question by the death of
a Florida woman, Susan Reynard of Madeira Beach, from a brain tumor. In
January 1993, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel published a story about a
lawsuit filed by her husband, David, alleging that the cellular phone he
bought her while she was pregnant caused or accelerated the growth of the
tumor that killed her. The case was later dismissed for lack of
scientific evidence.

At the time the suit was filed, the cell phone industry association, the
CTIA, said thousands of studies had been done showing the phones were
safe, but then was not able to provide any. The industry pledged to spend
$25 million on research to prove the phones are safe.

At least three federal agencies -- the Food and Drug Administration, the
Federal Communications Commission, and the Environmental Protection
Agency -- have roles in regulating radio-frequency radiation, but only
recently has the federal government committed funds to studying the cell
phone issue. Those studies are not expected to be completed for five to
seven years.

Dr. George Carlo, an epidemiologist then working at George Washington
University School of Medicine, coordinated the industry-supported
project, which began in the mid-1990s. When the money ran out in 2000,
Carlo said, more research was needed because one study showed the risk of
acoustic neuroma was 50 percent higher in people who used cell phones for
six years or more, and that there appeared to be a correlation between
brain tumors on the right side of the head and the use of the phones on
that side.

Carlo could not be reached on Wednesday, but the CTIA issued a statement
on the Karolinska findings.

"This is just one study on this particular subject and no conclusions can
be drawn from it," said spokesman John Walls. "The wireless industry
agrees that more research is needed in this area to provide definitive
answers to any questions that might still exist. Numerous independent
scientific bodies have conducted research on possible health effects from
using wireless phones and it is widely accepted that no conclusive link
can be made."

Mays Swicord, director of electromagnetic energy research at Motorola in
Plantation, one of the world's largest manufacturers of wireless
products, said the Karolinska study has to be taken in context alongside
1,300 other peer-reviewed publications on radio frequency radiation and
health. No consistent evidence has been observed for an increased risk of
cancer, he said.

Swicord said the Swedish study findings eventually will be pooled with
similar studies under way in 12 other countries as part of the so-called
INTERPHONE study, an international collaboration coordinated by WHO's
International Agency for Research on Cancer. 

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