Leukaemia Risk 70% Higher For Children Near Power Lines
By Nic Fleming
Health Correspondent, The Telegraph - UK
6-2-2005
Children born close to high-voltage overhead power lines are more likely to
be diagnosed with leukaemia, according to the results of a major
Government-funded study published today.
Researchers find that those whose childhood homes are within 200 metres of a
power line have an almost 70 per cent greater risk of being diagnosed with
leukaemia.
However, they stress that they have not established the cause of the
increased risk and that it could be due to other factors, such as
differences in wealth between those who live near power lines and those who
do not.
They say that if the 275 kilovolt (kV) and 400kV national grid lines
investigated in the study are indeed the cause of the rise, they would be
responsible for approximately one per cent of leukaemia cases in England and
Wales, or around five cases per year.
Campaigners claim that lower voltage regional power lines, which operate at
132kV, might have the same effect, in which case the number of leukaemia
cases linked to electricity transmission could be 10 times higher.
The study, the largest of its kind to date, is published today in the
British Medical Journal. It analyses 29,081 people from England and Wales
who were diagnosed with cancer aged under 15 between 1962 and 1995. They are
compared with the same number of healthy individuals, matched for sex and
year and area of birth.
Researchers calculated the distance from each person's home at birth and the
nearest high-voltage overhead line.
For those born within 200 metres of a power line, the risk of leukaemia is
69 per cent greater than for those born more than 600 metres away. Those
between 200 metres and 600 metres from a power line are 23 per cent more
likely to have been diagnosed with leukaemia than those whose homes were
more than 600 metres away. No increased risks are found for other types of
childhood cancer. Dr Gerald Draper, of the Oxford Childhood Cancer Research
Group, led the research. He says: "The increased risk of leukaemia up to 600
metres from the high voltage power was surprising in the view of the very
low level of magnetic fields at these distances.
"There is no accepted biological mechanism to explain these results. It
could be down to confounding factors such as socio-economic factors.
"People should not panic. More research must be carried out to find the
mechanism."
Dr John Swanson, a scientific adviser to National Grid Transco and one of
the study's co-authors, says: "The study strengthens the evidence that
childhood leukaemia rates are slightly higher near power lines, but leaves
the question of what causes this more confused than before."
One theory is that "corona ions", small charged particles given off by power
lines, attach themselves to air pollution particles. It is argued that those
who live nearby are therefore more at risk from inhaled pollution.
Around 400 to 420 new leukaemia cases are diagnosed in England and Wales
each year. Scientists have suggested a range of causes including genetic
susceptibility, ionising radiation, unusual patterns of exposure to
infection and electromagnetic fields.
Two major studies published in 2000 by Swedish and American researchers
concluded that there was a doubling of the risk of childhood leukaemia
associated with the level of magnetic field exposure received around 100
metres from a power line.
Alasdair Phillips, of the consumer group Powerwatch, said: "The Government
should bring in a ban on new building within 250 metres of high voltage
power lines.
"Nurseries and schools, or the adjacent power lines, should be relocated so
that they are further away than 500 metres from high voltage overhead power
lines."
? Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 2005.
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