| Literature DB >> 26991812 |
Joachim Schüz1, Clemens Dasenbrock2, Paolo Ravazzani3, Martin Röösli4, Primo Schär5, Patricia L Bounds6, Friederike Erdmann1, Arndt Borkhardt7, César Cobaleda8, Maren Fedrowitz9, Yngve Hamnerius10, Isidro Sanchez-Garcia11, Rony Seger12, Kjeld Schmiegelow13, Gunde Ziegelberger14, Myles Capstick6, Melissa Manser5, Meike Müller2, Christoph D Schmid4, David Schürmann5, Benjamin Struchen4, Niels Kuster6.
Abstract
Exposure to extremely low-frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MF) was evaluated in an International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) Monographs as "possibly carcinogenic to humans" in 2001, based on increased childhood leukemia risk observed in epidemiological studies. We conducted a hazard assessment using available scientific evidence published before March 2015, with inclusion of new research findings from the Advanced Research on Interaction Mechanisms of electroMagnetic exposures with Organisms for Risk Assessment (ARIMMORA) project. The IARC Monograph evaluation scheme was applied to hazard identification. In ARIMMORA for the first time, a transgenic mouse model was used to mimic the most common childhood leukemia: new pathogenic mechanisms were indicated, but more data are needed to draw definitive conclusions. Although experiments in different animal strains showed exposure-related decreases of CD8+ T-cells, a role in carcinogenesis must be further established. No direct damage of DNA by exposure was observed. Overall in the literature, there is limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans and inadequate evidence of carcinogenicity in experimental animals, with only weak supporting evidence from mechanistic studies. New exposure data from ARIMMORA confirmed that if the association is nevertheless causal, up to 2% of childhood leukemias in Europe, as previously estimated, may be attributable to ELF-MF. In summary, ARIMMORA concludes that the relationship between ELF-MF and childhood leukemia remains consistent with possible carcinogenicity in humans. While this scientific uncertainty is dissatisfactory for science and public health, new mechanistic insight from ARIMMORA experiments points to future research that could provide a step-change in future assessments. Bioelectromagnetics. 37:183-189, 2016.Entities:
Keywords: adverse effects; children; electromagnetic fields; hazard identification; leukemia; risk assessment
Year: 2016 PMID: 26991812 DOI: 10.1002/bem.21963
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioelectromagnetics ISSN: 0197-8462 Impact factor: 2.010