This release is available in French.   
Montreal, May 17, 2010  The world's biggest investigation on  possible links between cell phone use and brain tumours is inconclusive,  according to a Canadian scientist who collaborated on the Interphone  International Study Group. Jack Siemiatycki, a professor at the  University of Montreal and an epidemiologist at the University of  Montreal Hospital Research Center, says restricted access to  participants compromised the validity of results of the study to be  published in the May 18 International Journal of Epidemiology.  "The findings of the Interphone Study are ambiguous, surprising and  puzzling," he says. 
The Interphone International Study Group, which examined whether  cellular radio frequencies could be correlated to brain tumours, was  coordinated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. The  investigation was led by 21 epidemiologists from Australia, Canada,  Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, New Zealand,  Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom. Over 10,000 people took part in  the study: cell phone users; non cell phone users; cell phone users who  survived brain cancer as well as brain cancer survivors who had never  used cell phones. 
Paradoxical findings   "If we combine all users and compare them with non-users, the  Interphone Study found no increase in brain cancer among users. In fact,  surprisingly, we found that when we combine users independently of the  amount of use, they had lower brain cancer risks than non-users," says  Dr. Siemiatycki, who teaches in the University of Montreal Faculty of  Medicine. "However, the study also found heavy users of cell phones  appeared to be at a higher risk of brain tumours than non-users."
Why the discrepancy? Simply put, scientists are unsure. Attention  has focused on the methodology of the study and, in particular, on the representativeness of the study subjects who  participated. With participation rates in the range of 50 percent to 60  percent of eligible subjects, it is possible that the participants did  not provide an accurate portrait of cell phone usage among cancer cases  and among healthy control subjects. Dr. Siemiatycki argues this problem  arose because of constraints imposed on researchers by ethics committees  intended to protect potential research subjects.   "Ethics reviews are now so rigid that scientists from Canada, the  United States and Europe are losing the kind of access to medical  databases and to study subjects that is needed to conduct studies such  as this one. Ethics committees increasingly require that researchers  work through treating physicians, professionals who are already  overworked, to recruit their patients. This may work for clinical  research exploring treatment of cancer, in which physicians often have a  professional or personal interest, but it does not work for  investigations into the causes of cancer. This flawed system can produce  biased study results."  
Despite the inconclusive results of the Interphone Study, consumers  should not panic about possible risks related to cell phones, stresses  Dr. Siemiatycki. "If there are risks, they are probably pretty small.  Should anyone be concerned about potential dangers of cell phones, they  can remedy the issue by using hands-free devices and avoid exposure to  radio frequencies around their head."
References:
Bio Medicine
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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