Francine
Laden; Lucas M. Neas; Paige E. Tolbert; Michelle
D. Holmes; Susan E. Hankinson; Donna Spiegelman; Frank E.
Speizer; David J. Hunter
American Journal of
Epidemiology, Volume 152, Issue 1, 1 July 2000, Pages 41–49, https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/152.1.41
Abstract
Electric and magnetic fields
(EMFs) have been hypothesized to increase the risk of breast cancer, and
electric blankets represent an important source of exposure to EMFs. The
authors examined the relation between electric blanket use and invasive breast cancer
in the Nurses' Health Study. On the biennial questionnaire in 1992, 87,497
women provided information on this exposure during three consecutive time
periods. In a prospective analysis with 301,775 person-years of follow-up
through 1996 (954 cases), the relative risk for any electric blanket use was
not elevated (relative risk (RR) = 1.08, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.95,
1.24) after controlling for breast cancer risk factors. There was a weak
association between breast cancer and electric blanket use at least 16 years
before diagnosis and long-term use in age-adjusted analyses but not in
multivariate models. In a retrospective analysis of 1,318,683 person-years of
follow-up (2,426 cases), the multivariate relative risk associated with use
before disease follow-up began was null (RR = 1.05, 95% CI: 0.95, 1.16).
Similar results were obtained in analyses stratified by menopause and
restricted to estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers. While 95% confidence
intervals for these estimates did not exclude small risks, overall, results did
not support an association between breast cancer risk and exposure to EMFs from
electric blankets.
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