Astrocytoma risk related to job exposure to electric and magnetic fields
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Bioelectromagnetics
- Vol. 12 (1) , 57-66
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bem.2250120108
Abstract
To investigate the association between occupational exposure to low-frequency electric and magnetic (EM) fields and risk of brain tumors, a study was performed in Los Angeles County on 272 male adults with primary intracranial gliomas or meningiomas and 272 neighborhood controls. Complete occupational histories were collected. Risk associated with employment for more than 10 years in jobs that are presumed to entail exposure to EM fields was computed for various histological groupings. A nonsignificantly elevated risk of 1.7 was found for gliomas (all types pooled: 95% confidence interval 0.7–4.4), and a nonsignificantly reduced risk of 0.3 (95% confidence interval 0.03–3.2) was found for meningiomas. For astrocytomas, which form a subtype of the gliomas, a significantly elevated risk of 10.3 (95% confidence interval 1.3–80.8) was found; a significant upward trend (P = .01) of tumor incidence with increasing length of employment was observed. Most astrocytoma patients who worked in occupations involving exposure to EM fields were electricians or electrical engineers.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Occupational Risks for Brain Cancer: A New Zealand Cancer Registry-Based StudyJournal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1989
- Tumors of the Brain and Nervous System after Radiotherapy in ChildhoodNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- Occupational exposures and brain cancer mortality: A preliminary study of East Texas residentsAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1988
- Exposure to electromagnetic fields and brain malignancy: A newly discovered menace?American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1988
- 50‐Hz electromagnetic environment and the incidence of childhood tumors in Stockholm countyBioelectromagnetics, 1986
- Mortality in workers exposed to electromagnetic fields.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1985
- LONG-TERM MORTALITY STUDY OF OIL REFINERY WORKERS I. MORTALITY OF HOURLY AND SALARIED WORKERS1American Journal of Epidemiology, 1983
- Follow-up Study of Patients Treated by X-ray Epilation for Tinea CapitisArchives of environmental health, 1976
- Criteria for rehousing on medical groundsPublic Health, 1975
- The LancetThe Lancet, 1974