PITTSBURGH(AP)
The head of a prominent cancer research institute issued an
unprecedented warning to his faculty and staff Wednesday: Limit
cell phone use because of the possible risk of cancer.
The warning from Dr. Ronald B. Herberman, director of the
University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, is contrary to numerous
studies that don't find a link between cancer and cell phone
use, and a public lack of worry by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
Herberman is basing his alarm on early unpublished data. He says
it takes too long to get answers from science and he believes
people should take action now _ especially when it comes to
children.
"Really at the heart of my concern is that we shouldn't
wait for a definitive study to come out, but err on the side of
being safe rather than sorry later," Herberman said.
No other major academic cancer research institutions have
sounded such an alarm about cell phone use. But Herberman's
advice is sure to raise concern among many cell phone users and
especially parents.
In the memo he sent to about 3,000 faculty and staff Wednesday,
he says children should use cell phones only for emergencies
because their brains are still developing.
Adults should keep the phone away from the head and use the
speakerphone or a wireless headset, he says. He even warns against
using cell phones in public places like a bus because it exposes
others to the phone's electromagnetic fields.
The issue that concerns some scientists _ though nowhere near a
consensus _ is electromagnetic radiation, especially its possible
effects on children. It is not a major topic in conferences of
brain specialists.
A 2008 University of Utah analysis looked at nine studies _
including some Herberman cites _ with thousands of brain tumor
patients and concludes "we found no overall increased risk of
brain tumors among cellular phone users. The potential elevated
risk of brain tumors after long-term cellular phone use awaits
confirmation by future studies."
Studies last year in France and Norway concluded the same
thing.
"If there is a risk from these products _ and at this point
we do not know that there is _ it is probably very small," the
Food and Drug Administration says on an agency Web site.
Still, Herberman cites a "growing body of literature
linking long-term cell phone use to possible adverse health effects
including cancer."
"Although the evidence is still controversial, I am
convinced that there are sufficient data to warrant issuing an
advisory to share some precautionary advice on cell phone
use," he wrote in his memo.
A driving force behind the memo was Devra Lee Davis, the
director of the university's center for environmental
oncology.
"The question is do you want to play Russian roulette with
your brain," she said in an interview from her cell phone
while using the hands-free speaker phone as recommended. "I
don't know that cell phones are dangerous. But I don't know
that they are safe."
Of concern are the still unknown effects of more than a decade
of cell phone use, with some studies raising alarms, said Davis, a
former health adviser in the Clinton Administration.
She said 20 different groups have endorsed the advice the
Pittsburgh cancer institute gave, and authorities in England,
France and India have cautioned children's use of cell
phones.
Herberman and Davis point to a massive ongoing research project
known as Interphone, involving scientists in 13 nations, mostly in
Europe. Results already published in peer-reviewed journals from
this project aren't so alarming, but Herberman is citing work
not yet published.
The published research focuses on more than 5,000 cases of brain
tumors. The National Research Council in the U.S., which isn't
participating in the Interphone project, reported in January that
the brain tumor research had "selection bias." That means
it relied on people with cancer to remember how often they used
cell phones. It is not considered the most accurate research
approach.
The largest published study, which appeared in the Journal of
the National Cancer Institute in 2006, tracked 420,000 Danish cell
phone users, including thousands that had used the phones for more
than 10 years. It found no increased risk of cancer among those
using cell phones.
A French study based on Interphone research and published in
2007 concluded that regular cell phone users had "no
significant increased risk" for three major types of nervous
system tumors. It did note, however, that there was "the
possibility of an increased risk among the heaviest users" for
one type of brain tumor, but that needs to be verified in future
research.
Earlier research also has found no connection.
Joshua E. Muscat of Penn State University, who has studied
cancer and cell phones in other research projects partly funded by
the cell phone industry, said there are at least a dozen studies
that have found no cancer-cell phone link. He said a Swedish study
cited by Herberman as support for his warning was biased and
flawed.
"We certainly don't know of any mechanism by which
radiofrequency exposure would cause a cancerous effect in cells. We
just don't know this might possibly occur," Muscat
said.
Cell phones emit radiofrequency energy, a type of radiation that
is a form of electromagnetic radiation, according to the National
Cancer Institute. Though studies are being done to see if there is
a link between it and tumors of the brain and central nervous
system, there is no definitive link between the two, the institute
says on its Web site.
"By all means, if a person feels compelled that they should
take precautions in reducing the amount of electromagnetic radio
waves through their bodies, by all means they should do so,"
said Dan Catena, a spokesman for the American Cancer Society.
"But at the same time, we have to remember there's no
conclusive evidence that links cell phones to cancer, whether
it's brain tumors or other forms of cancer."
Joe Farren, a spokesman for the CTIA-The Wireless Association, a
trade group for the wireless industry, said the group believes
there is a risk of misinforming the public if science isn't
used as the ultimate guide on the issue.
"When you look at the overwhelming majority of studies that
have been peer reviewed and published in scientific journals around
the world, you'll find no relationship between wireless usage
and adverse health affects," Farren said.
Frank Barnes, who chaired the January report from the National
Research Council, said Wednesday that "the jury is out"
on how hazardous long-term cell phone use might be.
Speaking from his cell phone, the professor of electrical and
computer engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder said
he takes no special precautions in his own phone use. And he
offered no specific advice to people worried about the matter.
It's up to each individual to decide what if anything to do.
If people use a cell phone instead of having a land line,
"that may very well be reasonable for them," he said.
Susan Juffe, a 58-year-old Pittsburgh special education teacher,
heard about Herberman's cell phone advice on the radio earlier
in the day.
"Now, I'm worried. It's scary," she said.
She says she'll think twice about allowing her 10-year-old
daughter Jayne to use the cell phone.
"I don't want to get it (brain cancer) and I certainly
don't want you to get it," she explained to her
daughter.
Sara Loughran, a 24-year-old doctoral student at the University
of Pittsburgh, sat in a bus stop Wednesday chatting on her cell
phone with her mother. She also had heard the news earlier in the
day, but was not as concerned.
"I think if they gave me specific numbers and specific
information and it was scary enough, I would be concerned,"
Loughran said, planning to call her mother again in a matter of
minutes. "Without specific numbers, it's too vague to get
me worked up."
___
Jennifer Yates reported from Pittsburgh. Science Writer Seth
Borenstein reported from Washington. Reporter Ramit Plushnick-Masti
contributed from Pittsburgh and Science Writer Malcolm Ritter
contributed from New York.
___
On the Net:
Advice from the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute:
http://www.environmentaloncology.org/node/201
Food and Drug Administration on cell phones:
http://www.fda.gov/cellphones/qa.html
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