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Parental
occupational exposure to magnetic fields and childhood cancer (Sweden)
Maria
Feychting, Birgitta Floderus, Anders Ahlbom
Institute
of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Box 210, S-171-77 Stockholm,
Sweden; Ph.: +46 8 7287465; Fax: +46 8 313961; Maria.Feychting@imm.ki.se.
Objectives.
To test the hypothesis that parental occupational exposure to magnetic fields
before conception and during pregnancy increases the risk of cancer in the
offspring.
Methods.
The study is designed as a cohort study based on a population of 235,635
children born shortly after two different censuses in Sweden.
The children were followed from birth to 14 years and cases of cancer were
identified in the Swedish cancer registry.
The parents' occupational titles in the censuses were linked to a job-exposure
matrix with information about magnetic field levels in different
occupations.
The cancer incidence among the exposed was compared to that among the unexposed
using Cox proportional hazards modeling.
Results.
There was no
association between childhood cancer and maternal occupational magnetic field
exposure.
Paternal exposure was associated with an increased risk of childhood leukemia,
with a relative risk of 2.0 (95% CI 1.1–3.5)
for exposures ≥ 0.30 μT.
A decreased risk was found for brain tumors
(RR = 0.5; 95% CI 0.3–1.0).
Conclusions.
The results do not support previous findings of an increased risk of childhood brain
tumors associated with paternal
occupational exposure to magnetic fields.
The finding for childhood leukemia has to be interpreted with caution.
Keywords:
brain
tumor, cancer, child, leukemia, magnetic
fields, parental occupation
Copyright
© 2000 Kluwer
Academic Publishers. All
rights reserved
Source: http://www.kluweronline.com/article.asp?PIPS=251690
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