Skip to: site menu | section menu | main content
In this case-control study, the researchers found that, in general, children who lived in homes with high measured magnetic fields were not significantly more likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) than children living in homes with lower magnetic field levels.
Nor was ALL found
to be more likely among those whose homes were classified in high categories
of "wire-code," a surrogate measure of magnetic fields that is
based on the thickness, configuration, and distance from the home of nearby
power lines.
"The results of our study differ from three earlier U.S. studies in
that we found no evidence of a significantly increased risk of ALL among
children whose main residence or residence during pregnancy was classified
in the highest wire code category," said lead investigator Martha S.
Linet, M.D., of NCI's Radiation Epidemiology Branch.
The results are published
in the July 3 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.**
Whether power frequency magnetic field exposures (EMFs) may increase cancer
risk has been a controversial question, and nearly two decades of research
has produced conflicting results.
EMFs exist naturally inside the human body
and in the surrounding environment. But stronger fields are produced by power
lines and electric appliances, which have been the focus of most research.
Recent research has focused on magnetic fields, specifically the 60 cycle-per-second
(60 hertz) fields produced by alternating current (AC) in household electrical
power.
The first study to suggest a risk from magnetic fields was published in 1979,
when researchers reported that children who had died from leukemia or other
cancers were about two to three times more likely than other children to
have lived within 40 meters of a high-current power line.
Several other groups
of investigators later described similar findings based on proximity to power
lines. When researchers have actually measured magnetic fields in children's
homes, however, they have not found significantly increased risks of leukemia
or other cancers.
Previous studies on magnetic fields and childhood cancer have had one or
more shortcomings that make interpretation of their results difficult. These
include small numbers of leukemia cases, measurements limited to a single
residence, long intervals between leukemia diagnosis and magnetic field measurement,
and data collectors aware of which children had leukemia (cases) and which
did not (controls).
The NCI/CCG researchers designed their study to overcome these limitations
as much as possible. A large study population covering nine states was chosen,
and measurement technicians were unaware of case or control status.
For most
subjects, measurements were made within two years after diagnosis, and were
obtained in both current and former residences. The measurements covered
homes in which the child had lived for at least 70 percent of his or her
life, or 70 percent of the five years immediately before diagnosis for children
age 5 and older.
The researchers compared magnetic field exposures of 638 children with leukemia
and 620 children without leukemia who were similar in age and race. About
58 percent of the children were under age 5, the age group in which ALL is
most common. The participants lived in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan,
Minnesota, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
The researchers estimated magnetic field exposures in two different ways:
by measuring fields in current and former homes of the children (including
homes their mothers lived in during the pregnancy) and by assigning wire
codes to the homes. Slightly less than half of all subjects had summary residential
magnetic levels less than 0.065 microtesla (µT)***, close to 20 percent had levels
ranging from 0.065 to 0.099 µT, 23 percent had levels ranging from 0.100
to 0.199 µT, and the remaining 12 percent had levels of 0.200 µT
or higher.
If magnetic fields increased risk for ALL, the researchers would expect
that the higher the measured level of magnetic fields in homes, and the
higher the wire code category, the more ALL cases they would find. But
in general, they did not see either of these patterns.
For children living in homes with magnetic fields measured at 0.2 µT or above, the researchers calculated a slightly elevated, but not statistically significant risk for ALL compared with risk for children living in homes with magnetic fields below 0.065 µT.
While
risk of ALL appeared to be slightly higher among children residing in homes
with high levels, the absence of a consistent pattern of increasing risk
with increasing exposure level suggests that the slight increase seen could
be due to chance.
In addition, the researchers found no relationship between wire code classification
and risk for ALL. Children with ALL were no more likely than controls to
live in homes with high wire-code classification.
The researchers also interviewed mothers of case and control children about
the children's electrical appliance use and the mothers' appliance use during
pregnancy. Results from this part of the study are still being analyzed and
are expected to be published separately in 1998.
"This important study would not have been possible without the close collaboration
and commitment of the physicians, nurses, and researchers of the Children's Cancer
Group, and the cooperation of the families who participated," said Leslie
L. Robison, Ph.D., a co-investigator in the study and professor of pediatrics
at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
The Children's Cancer Group
is a multicenter network of pediatric oncologists and other researchers from
38 institutions and affiliated hospitals who diagnose and treat approximately
50 percent of children with cancer in the United States.
The NCI/CCG study is part of a larger CCG investigation of ALL comprising
more than 1,900 ALL cases and 1,900 controls. The larger study, overseen
by Dr. Robison, is designed to evaluate the risk of ALL associated with a
wide range of factors, including maternal diseases and medication use during
pregnancy, childhood diseases, and other exposures such as parental occupation.
Results are expected within the next two years.
NOTE: This web site is designed for educational purposes only and is not engaged in rendering medical advice. The information provided through this site should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health problem or a disease. If you have or suspect you may have a health problem, you should consult your health care provider