WASHINGTON - A huge study from Denmark offers the latest reassurance that
cell phones don't trigger cancer. Scientists tracked 420,000 Danish cell phone
users, including 52,000 who had gabbed on the gadgets for 10 years or more, and
some who started using them 21 years ago.
Three students talk on their cell phones as they move between
classes, April 26, 2006, at the University of Cincinnati. [AP]
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They matched phone records to the famed Danish
Cancer Registry that records every citizen who gets the disease - and reported Tuesday
that cell-phone callers are no more likely than anyone else to suffer a range of
cancer types.
The study, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, is the
largest yet to find no bad news about the safety of cell phones and the
radiofrequency energy they emit.
But even the lead researcher doubts it will end the debate.
"There's really no biological basis for you to be concerned about radio
waves," said John Boice, a Vanderbilt University professor and scientific
director of the International Epidemiology Institute in Rockville, Md.
"Nonetheless, people are."
So Boice and colleagues at Copenhagen's Danish Cancer Society plan to
continue tracking the Danish callers until at least some have used the phones
for 30 years.
This so-called Danish cohort "is probably the strongest study out there
because of the outstanding registries they keep," said Joshua Muscat of
Pennsylvania State University, who also has studied cell phones and cancer.
"As the body of evidence accumulates, people can become more reassured that
these devices are safe, but the final word is not there yet," Muscat added.
Cell phones beam radiofrequency energy that can penetrate the brain's outer
edge, raising questions about cancers of the head and neck, brain tumors or
leukemia. Most research has found no risk, but a few studies have raised
questions. And while US health officials insist the evidence shows no real
reason for concern, they don't give the phones a definitive clean bill of
health, either, pending long-term data on slow-growing cancers.
For the latest study, personal identification numbers assigned to each Dane
at birth allowed researchers to match people who began using cell phones between
1982 and 1995 with cancer records.
Among 420,000 callers tracked through 2002, there were
14,249 cancers diagnosed - fewer than the 15,001 predicted from national
cancer rates. Nor did the study find increased risks for any specific tumor
type.