Kheifets Leeka, Afifi Abdelmonem A, Shimkhada Riti
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095-1772, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2006 Oct;114(10):1532-7. doi: 10.1289/ehp.8977.
The association between exposure to extremely low-frequency electric and magnetic fields (ELF) and childhood leukemia has led to the classification of magnetic fields by the International Agency for Research on Cancer as a "possible human carcinogen." This association is regarded as the critical effect in risk assessment. Creating effective policy in light of widespread exposure and the undisputed value of safe, reliable, and economic electricity to society is difficult and requires estimates of the potential public health impact and associated uncertainties.
Although a causal relationship between magnetic fields and childhood leukemia has not been established, we present estimates of the possible pubic health impact using attributable fractions to provide a potentially useful input into policy analysis under different scenarios.
Using ELF exposure distributions from various countries and dose-response functions from two pooled analyses, we calculate country-specific and worldwide estimates of attributable fractions (AFs) and attributable cases.
Even given a wide range of assumptions, we find that the AF remains < 10%, with point estimates ranging from < 1% to about 4%. For small countries with low exposure, the number of attributable cases is less than one extra case per year. Worldwide the range is from 100 to 2,400 cases possibly attributable to ELF exposure.
The fraction of childhood leukemia cases possibly attributable to ELF exposure across the globe appears to be small. There remain, however, a number of uncertainties in these AF estimates, particularly in the exposure distributions.
暴露于极低频电场和磁场(ELF)与儿童白血病之间的关联已导致国际癌症研究机构将磁场归类为“可能的人类致癌物”。这种关联被视为风险评估中的关键效应。鉴于广泛的暴露情况以及安全、可靠且经济的电力对社会具有无可争议的价值,制定有效的政策颇具难度,这需要对潜在的公共卫生影响及相关不确定性进行估计。
尽管尚未确定磁场与儿童白血病之间的因果关系,但我们使用归因分数来估计可能的公共卫生影响,以便为不同情景下的政策分析提供潜在有用的信息。
利用来自各个国家的极低频暴露分布以及两项汇总分析的剂量反应函数,我们计算了特定国家和全球范围内的归因分数(AFs)及归因病例数。
即便考虑到广泛的假设,我们发现归因分数仍小于10% , 点估计值范围从小于1%到约4%。对于暴露水平较低的小国,归因病例数每年增加不到一例。在全球范围内,归因于极低频暴露的病例数范围为100至2400例。
全球范围内可能归因于极低频暴露的儿童白血病病例比例似乎较小。然而,这些归因分数估计仍存在一些不确定性,尤其是在暴露分布方面。