| Literature DB >> 23189129 |
Hongjie Zhou1, Guangdi Chen, Chunjing Chen, Yunxian Yu, Zhengping Xu.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To estimate the relationship between exposure to extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (ELF-EMF) and the risk of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) by a meta-analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23189129 PMCID: PMC3506624 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0048354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow diagram of studies identification.
Characteristics of epidemiological studies of the association between occupational exposure to ELF-EMF and ALS risk.
| First author, year | Study population (country) | Design | Time period | Method of case ascertainment | Confounding variables | Exposure assessment, criteria | Main results |
| Deapen, 1986 | 518 cases and 518 controls (USA) | Case-control | 1977–1979 | Clinical examination | Age, sex | Questionnaire survey by mailJob title | OR = 3.8 (1.4–13.0) |
| Gunnarsson, 1991 | 1,961 cases and 2,245 controls (Sweden) | Case-control | 1970–1983 | Death certificates | Age, sex | 1960 national censusJob title | OR = 1.5 (0.9–2.6) |
| Gunnarsson, 1992 | 92 cases and 372 controls (Sweden) | Case-control | 1960–1990 | Clinical examination | Age, sex | Questionnaire survey by mailJob title | OR = 6.7 (1.0–32.1) |
| Strickland, 1996 | 25 cases and 50 controls (USA) | Case-control | 1982–1992 | Clinical examination | Age, sex, residence, physical capacities | InterviewJob title | OR = 8.0 (0.9–72.0) |
| Davanipour, 1997 | 28 cases and 32 controls (USA) | Case-control | Not mentioned | Clinical examination | Age, sex, education, socioeconomic status | Questionnaire by interview Job-exposure matrix | OR = 2.3 (0.8–6.6) |
| Savitz, 1998a | 114 cases and 228 controls (USA) nested in occupational cohorts | Case-control | 1985–1991 | Death certificates | Age, calendar year, social class, men only | From death certificateJob title | OR = 1.3 (1.1–1.6) |
| Savitz, 1998b | Cohort of 139,905 men and 33 cases (USA) | Cohort | 1950–1986 | Death certificates | Age, calendar year, race, social class, work status, PCB exposure, solvent exposure | Occupational recordsJob titleJob-exposure matrix(>1.1 µT) | RR = 2.4 (0.8–6.7)RR = 1.2 (0.5–3.0) |
| Johansen, 2000 | Cohort of 30,631 persons and 20 cases (Denmark) | Cohort | 1978–1993 | Clinical examination | Age, calendar period, duration of employment | Job-exposure matrix(>1.0 µT) | RR = 1.56 (0.29-8.53) |
| Noonan, 2002 | 312 cases and 1,248 controls (USA) | Case-control | 1987–1996 | Death certificates | Age, race, social class, men only | Death certificatesJob titleJob-exposure matrix(>0.3 µT) | OR = 2.3 (1.29–4.09)OR = 0.77 (0.37–1.59) |
| Feychting, 2003 | Cohort of 4,812,646 persons and 1965 cases (Sweden) | Cohort | 1981–1995 | Death certificates | Age, sex, social class | 1970 and 1980 censusesJob titleJob-exposure matrix(>0.5 µT) | RR = 1.4 (1.0–1.8)RR = 0.7 (0.6–1.0) |
| Hakansson, 2003 | Cohort of 537,692 men and 180,529 women and 97 cases (Sweden) | Cohort | 1985–1996 | Death certificates | Age, sex, social class | Job-exposure matrix(>0.5 µT) | RR = 2.16 (1.01–4.66) |
| Weisskopf, 2005 | Cohort of 1,184,561 persons and 937 cases (USA) | Cohort | 1989–2002 | Death certificates | Age, sex | Questionnaire by interviewJob title | RR = 0.99 (0.49–1.99) |
| Park, 2005 | 6347 cases (USA) | Case-control | 1992–1998; | Death certificates | Age, sex, race, region, socioeconomic status | Job-exposure matrix(0.9–0.99 µT) | OR = 0.94 (0.73–1.20) |
| Roosli, 2007 | Cohort of 20,141 persons and 15 cases (Switzerland) | Cohort | 1972–2002 | Death certificates | Age, time period, men only | death certificatesJob titleJob-exposure matrixCumulative lifetime Exposure >median | RR = 1.31 (0.31–5.59)RR = 2.32 (0.70–7.73) |
| Sorahan, 2007 | Cohort of 79,972 persons and 68 cases (England) | Cohort | 1973–2004 | Death certificates | Age, sex, socioeconomic status | Occupational recordsJob titleEstimated cumulative exposure to magnetic fieldsCumulative year >20 µT | RR = 0.87 (0.67–1.10)RR = 1.45 (0.60–3.55) |
| Fang, 2009 | 109 cases and 253 controls (England) | Case-control | 1993–1996 | Clinical examination | sex, age | InterviewJob title | OR = 1.4 (0.9–2.3) |
| Parlett, 2011 | Cohort of 307,012 persons and 40 cases (USA) | Cohort | 1979–2011 | Death certificates | age, sex, and education | Job-exposure matrix>0.27 µT | RR = 0.98 (0.39–2.50) |
Pooled estimates of the association between occupational exposure to ELF-EMF and ALS risk in pooled analyses and separate analyses.
| Subgroup analysis | Case-control studies | Cohort studies | Pooled studies | ||||||
| No. | OR(95% CI) | I2 ( | No. | RR(95% CI) | I2 ( | No. | RR(95% CI) | I2 ( | |
|
| 9 | 1.39(1.05–1.84) | 57.9% (0.015) | 8 | 1.16 (0.80–1.69) | 46.8% (0.069) | 17 | 1.29(1.02–1.62) | 58.9% (0.001) |
|
| |||||||||
| Job title | 7 | 1.76 (1.27–2.44) | 50.0% (0.062) | 5 | 1.16 (0.83–1.61) | 51.3% (0.084) | 12 | 1.45 (1.15–1.84) | 57.5% (0.007) |
| quantitative data | 3 | 1.01 (0.67–1.52) | 33.6% (0.222) | 7 | 1.23(0.79–1.93) | 54.3% (0.041) | 10 | 1.09(0.82–1.43) | 45.2% (0.059) |
|
| |||||||||
| Clinical diagnosis | 5 | 2.58 (1.35–4.92) | 42.2% (0.140) | 1 | 1.56 (0.29–8.53) | – | 6 | 2.31 (1.34–3.99) | 28.3% (0.223) |
| Death certificate | 4 | 1.13 (0.88–1.45) | 52.3% (0.098) | 7 | 1.15 (0.78–1.72) | 52.8% (0.048) | 11 | 1.11 (0.88–1.39) | 57.5% (0.009) |
Number of studies.
Percentage of total variation across studies attributable to statistical heterogeneity rather than to chance (25%, low; 50%, moderate; 75%, high); P value for heterogeneity test.
Figure 2Forest plot of the association between ALS risk and occupational exposure to ELF-EMF.
Figure 3Funnel plot analysis to detect publication bias.
Each point represents a separate study for the indicated association. A Funnel plot for all studies; B funnel plot for job title data; C funnel plot for quantitative data; D funnel plot for clinical examination data; E funnel plot for death certificate data.