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Mobile phone use and incidence of brain tumour histological types, grading or anatomical location: A populationbased ecological study

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posted on 2024-11-16, 03:20 authored by Ken Karipidis, Mark Elwood, Geza P Benke, Masoumeh Sanagou, Lydiawati Tjong, Rodney CroftRodney Croft
Objective Some studies have reported increasing trends in certain brain tumours and a possible link with mobile phone use has been suggested. We examined the incidence time trends of brain tumour in Australia for three distinct time periods to ascertain the influence of improved diagnostic technologies and increase in mobile phone use on the incidence of brain tumours. Design In a population-based ecological study, we examined trends of brain tumour over the periods 1982- 1992, 1993-2002 and 2003-2013. We further compared the observed incidence during the period of substantial mobile phone use (2003-2013) with predicted (modelled) incidence for the same period by applying various relative risks, latency periods and mobile phone use scenarios. Setting National Australian incidence registration data on primary cancers of the brain diagnosed between 1982 and 2013. Population 16 825 eligible brain cancer cases aged 20- 59 from all of Australia (10 083 males and 6742 females). Main outcome measures Annual percentage change (APC) in brain tumour incidence based on Poisson regression analysis. Results The overall brain tumour rates remained stable during all three periods. There was an increase in glioblastoma during 1993-2002 (APC 2.3, 95% CI 0.8 to 3.7) which was likely due to advances in the use of MRI during that period. There were no increases in any brain tumour types, including glioma (-0.6, -1.4 to 0.2) and glioblastoma (0.8, -0.4 to 2.0), during the period of substantial mobile phone use from 2003 to 2013. During that period, there was also no increase in glioma of the temporal lobe (0.5, -1.3 to 2.3), which is the location most exposed when using a mobile phone. Predicted incidence rates were higher than the observed rates for latency periods up to 15 years. Conclusions In Australia, there has been no increase in any brain tumour histological type or glioma location that can be attributed to mobile phones.

Funding

Australian Centre for Electromagnetic Bioeffects Research

National Health and Medical Research Council

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Citation

Karipidis, K., Elwood, M., Benke, G., Sanagou, M., Tjong, L. & Croft, R. J. (2018). Mobile phone use and incidence of brain tumour histological types, grading or anatomical location: A populationbased ecological study. BMJ Open, 8 (12), e024489-1-e024489-11.

Journal title

BMJ Open

Volume

8

Issue

12

Language

English

RIS ID

132331

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