Mobile phones, mobile phone base stations and cancer: a review
- 1 March 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Radiation Biology
- Vol. 81 (3) , 189-203
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09553000500091097
Abstract
There have been reports in the media and claims in the courts that radiofrequency (RF) emissions from mobile phones are a cause of cancer, and there have been numerous public objections to the siting of mobile phone base antennas because of a fear of cancer. This review summarizes the current state of evidence concerning whether the RF energy used for wireless communication might be carcinogenic. Relevant studies were identified by searching MedLine with a combination of exposure and endpoint terms. This was supplemented by a review of the over 1700 citations assembled by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) International Committee on Electromagnetic Safety as part of their updating of the IEEE C95.1 RF energy safety guidelines. Where there were multiple studies, preference was given to recent reports, to positive reports of effects and to attempts to confirm such positive reports. Biophysical considerations indicate that there is little theoretical basis for anticipating that RF energy would have significant biological effects at the power levels used by modern mobile phones and their base station antennas. The epidemiological evidence for a causal association between cancer and RF energy is weak and limited. Animal studies have provided no consistent evidence that exposure to RF energy at non-thermal intensities causes or promotes cancer. Extensive in vitro studies have found no consistent evidence of genotoxic potential, but in vitro studies assessing the epigenetic potential of RF energy are limited. Overall, a weight-of-evidence evaluation shows that the current evidence for a causal association between cancer and exposure to RF energy is weak and unconvincing. However, the existing epidemiology is limited and the possibility of epigenetic effects has not been thoroughly evaluated, so that additional research in those areas will be required for a more thorough assessment of the possibility of a causal connection between cancer and the RF energy from mobile telecommunications.Keywords
This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
- Measurements of Alkali-Labile DNA Damage and Protein–DNA Crosslinks after 2450 MHz Microwave and Low-Dose Gamma IrradiationIn VitroRadiation Research, 2004
- Measurement of DNA Damage and Apoptosis in Molt-4 Cells afterIn VitroExposure to Radiofrequency RadiationRadiation Research, 2004
- Measurement of DNA damage after acute exposure to pulsed‐wave 2450 MHz microwaves in rat brain cells by two alkaline comet assay methodsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2004
- Effects of mobile phone radiation on UV-induced skin tumourigenesis in ornithine decarboxylase transgenic and non-transgenic miceInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2003
- Chromosome Damage and Micronucleus Formation in Human Blood Lymphocytes ExposedIn Vitroto Radiofrequency Radiation at a Cellular Telephone Frequency (847.74 MHz, CDMA)Radiation Research, 2001
- Micronuclei in the peripheral blood and bone marrow cells of rats exposed to 2450 MHz radiofrequency radiationInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2001
- No mutagenic or recombinogenic effects of mobile phone fields at 900 MHz detected in the yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBioelectromagnetics, 2000
- No effect of short-term exposure to GSM-modulated low-power microwaves on benzo(a)pyrene-induced tumours in ratInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1999
- Melatonin and a spin-trap compound block radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation-induced DNA strand breaks in rat brain cellsBioelectromagnetics, 1997
- Neoplastic Transformation of C3H/10T 1/2 Cells Following Exposure to 120-Hz Modulated 2.45-GHz Microwaves and Phorbol Ester Tumor PromoterRadiation Research, 1991