Zook BC,Simmens SJ. · 2006
Researchers exposed 1,080 rats to pulsed 860 MHz radiofrequency radiation (similar to cell phone signals) for 6 hours daily to see if it would accelerate tumor development in animals already given a cancer-causing chemical. After examining over 1,200 brain and nervous system tumors, they found no evidence that RF exposure affected tumor incidence, growth rate, severity, or how quickly tumors appeared. This suggests that this particular RF signal did not act as a tumor promoter in this animal model.
Vrijheid M, Deltour I, Krewski D, Sanchez M, Cardis E. · 2006
Researchers used computer simulations to examine how memory errors and study design flaws might affect cancer research on cell phone use. They found that when people can't accurately remember their past phone usage, studies may significantly underestimate the true cancer risk from mobile phones. This suggests that existing studies showing little or no cancer risk may be missing real health effects due to these research limitations.
Vrijheid M et al. · 2006
Researchers tracked actual mobile phone use in 672 volunteers across 11 countries using operator records and software-modified phones, then compared this to what people remembered six months later. The study found that people's memories were moderately accurate but contained significant errors - light users underestimated their phone use while heavy users overestimated it. This memory bias weakens the ability of cancer studies to detect real health risks from mobile phone radiation.
Salahaldin AH, Bener A. · 2006
Researchers in Qatar examined all 13 cases of acoustic neuroma (a type of brain tumor) diagnosed over two years and found that most patients were heavy cell phone users, making calls 14 times daily for over 5 years. The country's acoustic neuroma rate of 17.2 cases per million people was higher than rates reported in other countries. This suggests a potential link between intensive cell phone use and this specific type of brain tumor.
Linet MS et al. · 2006
Researchers studied whether cellular phone use increases the risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (a type of blood cancer) by comparing 551 cancer patients to 462 healthy controls. They found no increased cancer risk even among regular phone users, though very few participants had used phones for more than 6 years or 200 total hours. The findings are limited because cell phone use was still relatively new when the study was conducted in the early 2000s.
Kim SC, Nam KC, Kim DW. · 2006
Researchers developed a computer model to estimate how much radiofrequency radiation different cell phone users receive based on their usage patterns. The model considers factors like daily usage time, hands-free use, phone type, and the phone's specific absorption rate (SAR) to rank exposure risk on a 0-10 scale. This tool could help scientists better categorize study participants in future research investigating links between cell phone radiation and brain cancer.
Hardell L, Carlberg M, Hansson Mild K. · 2006
Researchers analyzed phone use data from 905 brain cancer patients and 2,162 healthy controls to examine whether cellular and cordless phones increase brain tumor risk. They found that heavy phone users (more than 2,000 hours of lifetime use) had significantly higher rates of malignant brain tumors, with analog phones showing the highest risk at nearly 6 times normal rates. The risk was greatest when tumors developed on the same side of the head where people typically held their phone.
Hardell L, Carlberg M, Hansson Mild K. · 2006
Swedish researchers analyzed data from over 3,400 people to examine whether cell phone and cordless phone use increases the risk of benign brain tumors. They found that analog cell phone users had nearly triple the risk of developing acoustic neuroma (a tumor affecting hearing), while digital phones and cordless phones showed more modest increases in risk. The risk was highest among people who had used analog phones for more than 15 years.
Hardell, L., Carlberg, M., Mild, K., 2005. · 2006
Swedish researchers studied 317 people with malignant brain tumors and compared their phone usage to 692 healthy controls. They found that people who used analog cell phones, digital cell phones, or cordless phones had roughly 2-3 times higher odds of developing brain tumors, with the risk increasing to 3-4 times higher for those who used phones for more than 10 years. The risk was strongest for high-grade astrocytoma, an aggressive type of brain cancer.
Berg G et al. · 2006
German researchers studied nearly 1,500 workers exposed to radio frequency radiation in their jobs to see if they developed brain tumors more often than unexposed people. While they found no statistically significant increase in brain cancer risk, workers with the highest occupational RF exposure showed a 21% higher risk of glioma and 34% higher risk of meningioma compared to unexposed workers. The researchers noted that longer exposure duration showed a concerning trend toward increased risk that warrants further investigation.
Anghileri LJ, Mayayo E, Domingo JL, Thouvenot P. · 2006
Researchers exposed mice to radio frequency radiation from cellular phones and found it accelerated cancer development in ways similar to known cancer-promoting chemicals. The study showed that RF exposure triggered calcium ion signals that activated cancer-causing genes while weakening immune defenses. This suggests cell phone radiation may speed up cancer progression through the same biological pathways used by established carcinogens.
Anghileri LJ, Mayayo E, Domingo JL. · 2006
Researchers investigated whether iron supplements might worsen cancer risk from radiofrequency radiation exposure using animals that naturally develop lymphomas (blood cancers) as they age. They found that combining radiofrequency exposure with iron injections created a synergistic effect, meaning the combination was more dangerous than either factor alone. This suggests that people receiving iron therapy might face increased cancer risk from RF radiation exposure.
Zeng Q, Chen G, Weng Y, Wang L, Chiang H, Lu D, Xu Z. · 2006
Researchers exposed human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) to cell phone radiation at 1800 MHz for 24 hours to see if it changed gene and protein activity. While initial tests suggested some genes might be affected, follow-up verification tests found no consistent changes. The study concluded that cell phone radiation at these levels does not produce convincing evidence of biological effects on cellular gene or protein expression.
Yu D, Shen Y, Kuster N, Fu Y, Chiang H. · 2006
Researchers exposed 500 female rats to 900 MHz cell phone radiation (the same frequency used by GSM phones) for 4 hours daily over 26 weeks after giving them a cancer-causing chemical. While the study found no statistically significant increase in mammary tumors from RF exposure, there was a concerning trend toward higher cancer rates in rats exposed to the highest radiation levels, particularly during weeks 15-26.
Unknown authors · 2005
Researchers propose that power line magnetic fields increase childhood leukemia risk by disrupting melatonin production in the pineal gland. The study reviews evidence showing magnetic fields above 0.3-0.4 microT double leukemia risk, potentially by suppressing this protective hormone. Melatonin normally protects blood-forming cells from cancer-causing damage.
Unknown authors · 2005
German researchers exposed breast cancer cells to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (the same frequency as power lines) and found that EMF exposure made the cells more resistant to tamoxifen, a common breast cancer drug. The effect was strongest at 1.2 microTesla field strength, suggesting that power-frequency EMF exposure could interfere with cancer treatment effectiveness.
Unknown authors · 2005
Researchers studied how bright light exposure at night affects breast cancer growth by testing blood samples from healthy women before and after light exposure. They found that blood collected after 90 minutes of bright fluorescent light (equivalent to office lighting) lost its natural cancer-fighting properties and actually stimulated tumor growth in laboratory animals. This provides the first biological explanation for why female night shift workers have higher breast cancer rates.
Unknown authors · 2005
Researchers studied 678 brain tumor patients and 686 healthy controls to examine whether common household appliances increase brain tumor risk. The study found little evidence linking most appliances to brain tumors, though hair dryer use showed a modest association with gliomas and electric shaver use was linked to meningiomas in men. The authors concluded that electromagnetic fields from household appliances are unlikely to significantly increase brain tumor risk.
Unknown authors · 2005
Norwegian researchers studied adults living near high-voltage power lines from 1967-1996 to examine brain tumor risk from residential and occupational magnetic field exposure. They found elevated brain tumor risk for those with higher residential exposure to 50 Hz magnetic fields, though the increase wasn't statistically significant. Occupational exposure showed no increased risk.
Unknown authors · 2005
This review study examined whether power line magnetic fields increase childhood leukemia risk by disrupting melatonin production in the pineal gland. The researchers found that exposure above 0.3-0.4 microT doubles leukemia risk, potentially through suppressed nighttime melatonin, which normally protects blood-forming cells from damage. The evidence suggests children living near power lines face increased cancer risk through disrupted sleep hormone production.
Unknown authors · 2005
This 2005 Bernal Lecture reviewed the state of research on extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (ELF-EMFs) from power lines and electrical appliances, particularly regarding childhood leukemia risks. The review concluded there was no compelling experimental evidence that environmental ELF-EMFs cause biological responses, despite ongoing suspicions about health effects. The analysis highlighted major scientific challenges in EMF research including mechanism identification and study replication.
Unknown authors · 2005
This 2005 UK Health Protection Agency study investigated magnetic field exposures from household appliances in British homes as part of a childhood cancer study. The research found that most modern household devices produce magnetic fields below EU recommended levels, though some older appliances may exceed these guidelines. The study concluded that while short-term health effects are unlikely at current exposure levels, long-term risks below recommended thresholds cannot be ruled out.
Unknown authors · 2005
German researchers exposed breast cancer cells to 50 Hz electromagnetic fields (the frequency of power lines) and found that EMF exposure made the cells more resistant to tamoxifen, a common breast cancer treatment. The effect was strongest at 1.2 microTesla field strength, suggesting that everyday EMF exposure could potentially interfere with cancer therapy effectiveness.
Unknown authors · 2005
Scientists exposed rats with human breast cancer tumors to blood samples from healthy women collected during different times and lighting conditions. Blood drawn from women after 90 minutes of bright light exposure at night stimulated tumor growth just like daytime blood, while natural nighttime blood (rich in melatonin) suppressed cancer growth. This provides the first biological explanation for why female night shift workers have higher breast cancer rates.
Whitehead TD et al. · 2005
Researchers exposed cells to radiofrequency radiation from cell phone signals (CDMA, FDMA, and TDMA) at high absorption rates of 5-10 W/kg to see if it would activate Fos, a gene linked to cellular stress and potential cancer development. They found no significant changes in Fos expression compared to unexposed cells, failing to confirm an earlier study that had reported such effects. This suggests that RF radiation at these levels may not trigger this particular cellular stress response.