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Frontiers in Public Health | 2014

The MOBI-Kids study protocol: challenges in assessing childhood and adolescent exposure to electromagnetic fields from wireless telecommunication technologies and possible association with brain tumor risk

Siegal Sadetzki; Chelsea Eastman Langer; Revital Bruchim; Michael Kundi; Franco Merletti; Roel Vermeulen; Hans Kromhout; Ae-Kyoung Lee; Myron Maslanyj; Malcolm Ross Sim; Masao Taki; Joe Wiart; Bruce K. Armstrong; Elizabeth Milne; Geza Benke; Rosa Schattner; Hans-Peter Hutter; Adelheid Woehrer; Daniel Krewski; Charmaine Mohipp; Franco Momoli; Paul Ritvo; John J. Spinelli; Brigitte Lacour; Dominique Delmas; Thomas Remen; Katja Radon; Tobias Weinmann; Swaantje Klostermann; Sabine Heinrich

The rapid increase in mobile phone use in young people has generated concern about possible health effects of exposure to radiofrequency (RF) and extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic fields (EMF). MOBI-Kids, a multinational case–control study, investigates the potential effects of childhood and adolescent exposure to EMF from mobile communications technologies on brain tumor risk in 14 countries. The study, which aims to include approximately 1,000 brain tumor cases aged 10–24 years and two individually matched controls for each case, follows a common protocol and builds upon the methodological experience of the INTERPHONE study. The design and conduct of a study on EMF exposure and brain tumor risk in young people in a large number of countries is complex and poses methodological challenges. This manuscript discusses the design of MOBI-Kids and describes the challenges and approaches chosen to address them, including: (1) the choice of controls operated for suspected appendicitis, to reduce potential selection bias related to low response rates among population controls; (2) investigating a young study population spanning a relatively wide age range; (3) conducting a large, multinational epidemiological study, while adhering to increasingly stricter ethics requirements; (4) investigating a rare and potentially fatal disease; and (5) assessing exposure to EMF from communication technologies. Our experience in thus far developing and implementing the study protocol indicates that MOBI-Kids is feasible and will generate results that will contribute to the understanding of potential brain tumor risks associated with use of mobile phones and other wireless communications technologies among young people.


European Journal of Cancer | 2015

Childhood central nervous system tumours: Incidence and time trends in 13 Southern and Eastern European cancer registries

Paraskevi Papathoma; Thomas P. Thomopoulos; Maria A. Karalexi; Anton Ryzhov; Anna Zborovskaya; Nadya Dimitrova; Snezana Zivkovic; Sultan Eser; Luís Antunes; Mario Sekerija; Tina Zagar; Joana Bastos; Anna Demetriou; Raluca Cozma; Daniela Coza; Evdoxia Bouka; Nick Dessypris; Maria Kantzanou; Prodromos Kanavidis; Helen Dana; Emmanuel Hatzipantelis; Maria Moschovi; Sophia Polychronopoulou; Apostolos Pourtsidis; Eftichia Stiakaki; Evgenia Papakonstantinou; Konstantinos Oikonomou; Spyros Sgouros; Antonios Vakis; Basilios Zountsas

AIM Following completion of the first 5-year nationwide childhood (0-14 years) registration in Greece, central nervous system (CNS) tumour incidence rates are compared with those of 12 registries operating in 10 Southern-Eastern European countries. METHODS All CNS tumours, as defined by the International Classification of Childhood Cancer (ICCC-3) and registered in any period between 1983 and 2014 were collected from the collaborating cancer registries. Data were evaluated using standard International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) criteria. Crude and age-adjusted incidence rates (AIR) by age/gender/diagnostic subgroup were calculated, whereas time trends were assessed through Poisson and Joinpoint regression models. RESULTS 6062 CNS tumours were retrieved with non-malignant CNS tumours recorded in eight registries; therefore, the analyses were performed on 5191 malignant tumours. Proportion of death certificate only cases was low and morphologic verification overall high; yet five registries presented >10% unspecified neoplasms. The male/female ratio was 1.3 and incidence decreased gradually with age, apart from Turkey and Ukraine. Overall AIR for malignant tumours was 23/10(6) children, with the highest rates noted in Croatia and Serbia. A statistically significant AIR increase was noted in Bulgaria, whereas significant decreases were noted in Belarus, Croatia, Cyprus and Serbia. Although astrocytomas were overall the most common subgroup (30%) followed by embryonal tumours (26%), the latter was the predominant subgroup in six registries. CONCLUSION Childhood cancer registration is expanding in Southern-Eastern Europe. The heterogeneity in registration practices and incidence patterns of CNS tumours necessitates further investigation aiming to provide clues in aetiology and direct investments into surveillance and early tumour detection.


European Journal of Cancer | 2015

Childhood central nervous system tumour mortality and survival in Southern and Eastern Europe (1983-2014 ): Gaps persist across 14 cancer registries.

Maria A. Karalexi; Paraskevi Papathoma; Thomas P. Thomopoulos; Anton Ryzhov; Anna Zborovskaya; Nadya Dimitrova; Snezana Zivkovic; Sultan Eser; Luís Antunes; Mario Sekerija; Tina Zagar; Joana Bastos; Anna Demetriou; Domenic Agius; Raluca Cozma; Daniela Coza; Evdoxia Bouka; Nick Dessypris; Maria Belechri; Helen Dana; Emmanuel Hatzipantelis; Evgenia Papakonstantinou; Sophia Polychronopoulou; Apostolos Pourtsidis; Eftichia Stiakaki; Achilles Chatziioannou; Katerina Manolitsi; Georgios Orphanidis; Savvas Papadopoulos; Mathilda Papathanasiou

AIM Childhood central nervous system (CNS) tumour registration and control programs in Southern and Eastern Europe remain thin, despite the lethal nature of the disease. Mortality/survival data were assembled to estimate the burden of malignant CNS tumours, as well as the potential role of sociodemographic survival determinants across 14 cancer registries of this region. METHODS Average age-adjusted mortality rates were calculated, whereas time trends were quantified through Poisson and Joinpoint regressions. Kaplan-Meier curves were derived for the maximum and the more recent (10 and 5 year) registration periods. Multivariate Cox regression models were used to assess demographic and disease-related determinants. RESULTS Variations in mortality (8-16 per million) and survival (5-year: 35-69%) were substantial among the participating registries; in most registries mortality trend was stable, whereas Bulgaria, having the highest starting rate, experienced decreasing annual mortality (-2.4%, p=0.001). A steep decrease in survival rates was evident before the second year of follow-up. After controlling for diagnostic subgroup, age, gender and diagnostic year, Greece seemed to present higher survival compared with the other contributing registries, although the follow-up period was short. Irrespective of country, however, rural residence was found to impose substantial adverse repercussions on survival (hazard ratio (HR): 1.2, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.1-1.4). CONCLUSION Cross-country mortality and survival variations possibly reflect suboptimal levels of health care delivery and cancer control in some regions of Southern and Eastern Europe, notwithstanding questionable death certification patterns or follow-up procedures. Continuous childhood cancer registration and linkage with clinical data are prerequisite for the reduction of survival inequalities across Europe.


Environment International | 2017

Patterns of cellular phone use among young people in 12 countries: Implications for RF exposure

Chelsea Eastman Langer; Patricia de Llobet; Albert Dalmau; Joe Wiart; Geertje Goedhart; Martine Hours; Geza Benke; Evdoxia Bouka; Revital Bruchim; Kyung-Hwa Choi; Amanda Eng; Mina Ha; Maria A. Karalexi; Kosuke Kiyohara; Noriko Kojimahara; Daniel Krewski; Hans Kromhout; Brigitte Lacour; Andrea 't Mannetje; Milena Maule; Enrica Migliore; Charmaine Mohipp; Franco Momoli; Eleni Petridou; Katja Radon; Thomas Remen; Siegal Sadetzki; Malcolm Ross Sim; Tobias Weinmann; Roel Vermeulen

Characterizing exposure to radiofrequency (RF) fields from wireless telecommunications technologies during childhood and adolescence is a research priority in investigating the health effects of RF. The Mobi-Expo study aimed to describe characteristics and determinants of cellular phone use in 534 young people (10-24years) in 12 countries. The study used a specifically designed software application installed on smartphones to collect data on the use of wireless telecommunications devices within this age group. The role of gender, age, maternal education, calendar period, and country was evaluated through multivariate models mutually adjusting for all variables. Call number and duration were higher among females compared to males (geometric mean (GM) ratio 1.17 and 1.42, respectively), among 20-24year olds compared to 10-14year olds (GM ratio 2.09 and 4.40, respectively), and among lowest compared to highest social classes (GM ratio 1.52 and 1.58, respectively). The number of SMS was higher in females (GM ratio 1.46) and the middle age group (15-19year olds: GM ratio 2.21 compared to 10-14year olds) and decreased over time. Data use was highest in the oldest age group, whereas Wi-Fi use was highest in the middle age group. Both data and Wi-Fi use increased over time. Large differences in the number and duration of calls, SMS, and data/Wi-Fi use were seen by country, with country and age accounting for up to 50% of the variance. Hands-free and laterality of use did not show significant differences by sex, age, education, study period, or country. Although limited by a convenience sample, these results provide valuable insights to the design, analysis, and interpretation of future epidemiological studies concerning the health effects of exposure resulting from cellular phone use in young people. In addition, the information provided by this research may be used to design strategies to minimize RF exposure.


International Journal of Cancer | 2018

Neuroblastoma among children in Southern and Eastern European cancer registries: Variations in incidence and temporal trends compared to US: Incidence variation in neuroblastoma

Marios K. Georgakis; Nick Dessypris; Margarita Baka; Maria Moschovi; Vassilios Papadakis; Sophia Polychronopoulou; Maria Kourti; Emmanuel Hatzipantelis; Eftichia Stiakaki; Helen Dana; Evdoxia Bouka; Luís Antunes; Joana Bastos; Daniela Coza; Anna Demetriou; Domenic Agius; Sultan Eser; Raluca Gheorghiu; Mario Sekerija; Maciej Trojanowski; Tina Zagar; Anna Zborovskaya; Anton Ryzhov; Athanassios Tragiannidis; Paraskevi Panagopoulou; Eva Steliarova-Foucher; Eleni Petridou

Neuroblastoma comprises the most common neoplasm during infancy (first year of life). Our study describes incidence of neuroblastoma in Southern–Eastern Europe (SEE), including – for the first time – the Nationwide Registry for Childhood Hematological Malignancies and Solid Tumors (NARECHEM‐ST)/Greece, compared to the US population, while controlling for human development index (HDI). Age‐adjusted incidence rates (AIR) were calculated for 1,859 childhood (0–14 years) neuroblastoma cases, retrieved from 13 collaborating SEE registries (1990–2016), and were compared to those of SEER/US (N = 3,166; 1990–2012); temporal trends were assessed using Poisson regression and Joinpoint analyses. The overall AIR was significantly lower in SEE (10.1/million) compared to SEER (11.7 per million); the difference was maximum during infancy (43.7 vs. 53.3 per million, respectively), when approximately one‐third of cases were diagnosed. Incidence rates of neuroblastoma at ages <1 and 1–4 years were positively associated with HDI, whereas lower median age at diagnosis was correlated with higher overall AIR. Distribution of primary site and histology was similar in SEE and SEER. Neuroblastoma was slightly more common among males compared to females (male‐to‐female ratio: 1.1), mainly among SEE infants. Incidence trends decreased in infants in Slovenia, Cyprus and SEER and increased in Ukraine and Belarus. The lower incidence in SEE compared to SEER, especially in infants living in low HDI countries possibly indicates a lower level of overdiagnosis in SEE. Hence, increases in incidence rates in infancy noted in some subpopulations should be carefully monitored to avoid the unnecessary costs health impacts of tumors that could potentially spontaneously regress.


Hematological Oncology | 2017

Mortality and survival patterns of childhood lymphomas: geographic and age-specific patterns in Southern-Eastern European and SEER/US registration data.

Maria A. Karalexi; Marios K. Georgakis; Nick Dessypris; Anton Ryzhov; Anna Zborovskaya; Nadya Dimitrova; Snezana Zivkovic; Sultan Eser; Luís Antunes; Mario Sekerija; Tina Zagar; Joana Bastos; Anna Demetriou; Domenic Agius; Margareta Florea; Daniela Coza; Evdoxia Bouka; Helen Dana; Emmanuel Hatzipantelis; Maria Kourti; Maria Moschovi; Sophia Polychronopoulou; Eftichia Stiakaki; Apostolos Pourtsidis; Eleni Petridou

Childhood (0‐14 years) lymphomas, nowadays, present a highly curable malignancy compared with other types of cancer. We used readily available cancer registration data to assess mortality and survival disparities among children residing in Southern‐Eastern European (SEE) countries and those in the United States. Average age‐standardized mortality rates and time trends of Hodgkin (HL) and non‐Hodgkin (NHL; including Burkitt [BL]) lymphomas in 14 SEE cancer registries (1990‐2014) and the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (SEER, United States; 1990‐2012) were calculated. Survival patterns in a total of 8918 cases distinguishing also BL were assessed through Kaplan‐Meier curves and multivariate Cox regression models. Variable, rather decreasing, mortality trends were noted among SEE. Rates were overall higher than that in SEER (1.02/106), which presented a sizeable (−4.8%, P = .0001) annual change. Additionally, remarkable survival improvements were manifested in SEER (10 years: 96%, 86%, and 90% for HL, NHL, and BL, respectively), whereas diverse, still lower, rates were noted in SEE. Non‐HL was associated with a poorer outcome and an amphi‐directional age‐specific pattern; specifically, prognosis was inferior in children younger than 5 years than in those who are 10 to 14 years old from SEE (hazard ratio 1.58, 95% confidence interval 1.28‐1.96) and superior in children who are 5 to 9 years old from SEER/United States (hazard ratio 0.63, 95% confidence interval 0.46‐0.88) than in those who are 10 to 14 years old. In conclusion, higher SEE lymphoma mortality rates than those in SEER, but overall decreasing trends, were found. Despite significant survival gains among developed countries, there are still substantial geographic, disease subtype‐specific, and age‐specific outcome disparities pointing to persisting gaps in the implementation of new treatment modalities and indicating further research needs.


Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology | 2015

History of Maternal Fetal Loss and Childhood Leukaemia Risk in Subsequent Offspring: Differentials by Miscarriage or Stillbirth History and Disease Subtype

Maria A. Karalexi; Alkistis Skalkidou; Thomas P. Thomopoulos; Maria Belechri; Stylianos-Iason Biniaris-Georgallis; Evdoxia Bouka; Margarita Baka; Emmanuel Hatzipantelis; Maria Kourti; Sophia Polychronopoulou; Vassiliki Sidi; Eftichia Stiakaki; Maria Moschovi; Nick Dessypris; E. Th. Petridou

BACKGROUND Despite the putative intrauterine origins of childhood (0-14 years) leukaemia, it is complex to assess the impact of perinatal factors on disease onset. Results on the association of maternal history of fetal loss (miscarriage/stillbirth) with specific disease subtypes in the subsequent offspring are in conflict. We sought to investigate whether miscarriage and stillbirth may have different impacts on the risk of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and of its main immunophenotypes (B-cell and T-cell ALL), as contrasted to acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). METHODS One thousand ninety-nine ALL incidents (957 B-ALL) and 131 AML cases along with 1:1 age and gender-matched controls derived from the Nationwide Registry for Childhood Hematological Malignancies and Brain Tumors (1996-2013) were studied. Multivariable regression models were used to assess the roles of previous miscarriage(s) and stillbirth(s) on ALL (overall, B-, T-ALL) and AML, controlling for potential confounders. RESULTS Statistically significant exposure and disease subtype-specific associations of previous miscarriage(s) exclusively with AML [odds ratio (OR) 1.67, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.00, 2.81] and stillbirth(s) with ALL [OR 4.82, 95% CI 1.63, 14.24] and B-ALL particularly, emerged. CONCLUSION Differential pathophysiological pathways pertaining to genetic polymorphisms or cytogenetic aberrations are likely to create hostile environments leading either to fetal loss or the development of specific leukaemia subtypes in subsequent offspring, notably distinct associations of maternal miscarriage history confined to AML and stillbirth history confined to ALL (specifically B-ALL). If confirmed and further supported by studies revealing underlying mechanisms, these results may shed light on the divergent leukemogenesis processes.


Environmental Research | 2018

Recall of mobile phone usage and laterality in young people: The multinational Mobi-Expo study

Geertje Goedhart; Luuk van Wel; Chelsea Eastman Langer; Patricia de Llobet Viladoms; Joe Wiart; Martine Hours; Hans Kromhout; Geza Benke; Evdoxia Bouka; Revital Bruchim; Kyung Hwa Choi; Amanda Eng; Mina Ha; Anke Huss; Kosuke Kiyohara; Noriko Kojimahara; Daniel Krewski; Brigitte Lacour; Andrea 't Mannetje; Milena Maule; Enrica Migliore; Charmaine Mohipp; Franco Momoli; Eleni Petridou; Katja Radon; Thomas Remen; Siegal Sadetzki; Malcolm Ross Sim; Tobias Weinmann; Elisabeth Cardis

Objective To study recall of mobile phone usage, including laterality and hands‐free use, in young people. Methods Actual mobile phone use was recorded among volunteers aged between 10 and 24 years from 12 countries by the software application XMobiSense and was compared with self‐reported mobile phone use at 6 and 18 months after using the application. The application recorded number and duration of voice calls, number of text messages, amount of data transfer, laterality (% of call time the phone was near the right or left side of the head, or neither), and hands‐free usage. After data cleaning, 466 participants were available for the main analyses (recorded vs. self‐reported phone use after 6 months). Results Participants were on average 18.6 years old (IQR 15.2–21.8 years). The Spearman correlation coefficients between recorded and self‐reported (after 6 months) number and duration of voice calls were 0.68 and 0.65, respectively. Number of calls was on average underestimated by the participants (adjusted geometric mean ratio (GMR) self‐report/recorded = 0.52, 95% CI = 0.47–0.58), while duration of calls was overestimated (GMR=1.32, 95%, CI = 1.15–1.52). The ratios significantly differed by country, age, maternal educational level, and level of reported phone use, but not by time of the interview (6 vs. 18 months). Individuals who reported low mobile phone use underestimated their use, while individuals who reported the highest level of phone use were more likely to overestimate their use. Individuals who reported using the phone mainly on the right side of the head used it more on the right (71.1%) than the left (28.9%) side. Self‐reported left side users, however, used the phone only slightly more on the left (53.3%) than the right (46.7%) side. Recorded percentage hands‐free use (headset, speaker mode, Bluetooth) increased with increasing self‐reported frequency of hands‐free device usage. Frequent (≥50% of call time) reported headset or speaker mode use corresponded with 17.1% and 17.2% of total call time, respectively, that was recorded as hands‐free use. Discussion These results indicate that young people can recall phone use moderately well, with recall depending on the amount of phone use and participants’ characteristics. The obtained information can be used to calibrate self‐reported mobile use to improve estimation of radiofrequency exposure from mobile phones. HighlightsLarge multinational study on recall of mobile phone use in young participants.Mobile phone use was recorded from the phone rather than from operator data.We observed substantial systematic and random errors in recall.Results can be used as input for future studies and RF exposure modelling.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2017

Incidence, time trends and survival patterns of childhood pilocytic astrocytomas in Southern-Eastern Europe and SEER, US

Marios K. Georgakis; Maria A. Karalexi; Eleni I. Kalogirou; Anton Ryzhov; Anna Zborovskaya; Nadya Dimitrova; Sultan Eser; Luís Antunes; Mario Sekerija; Tina Zagar; Joana Bastos; Domenic Agius; Margareta Florea; Daniela Coza; Evdoxia Bouka; Charis Bourgioti; Helen Dana; Emmanuel Hatzipantelis; Maria Moschovi; Savvas Papadopoulos; Georgios Sfakianos; Evgenia Papakonstantinou; Sophia Polychronopoulou; Spyros Sgouros; Kalliopi Stefanaki; Eftichia Stiakaki; Katerina Strantzia; Basilios Zountsas; Apostolos Pourtsidis; E. Patsouris


Cancer Causes & Control | 2016

Incidence and time trends of childhood lymphomas: findings from 14 Southern and Eastern European cancer registries and the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results, USA

Marios K. Georgakis; Maria A. Karalexi; Domenic Agius; Luís Antunes; Joana Bastos; Daniela Coza; Anna Demetriou; Nadya Dimitrova; Sultan Eser; Margareta Florea; Anton Ryzhov; Mario Sekerija; Tina Žagar; Anna Zborovskaya; Snezana Zivkovic; Evdoxia Bouka; Prodromos Kanavidis; Helen Dana; Emmanuel Hatzipantelis; Maria Kourti; Maria Moschovi; Sophia Polychronopoulou; Eftichia Stiakaki; Μaria Kantzanou; Apostolos Pourtsidis; Eleni Petridou

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Helen Dana

Boston Children's Hospital

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Emmanuel Hatzipantelis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Maria Moschovi

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Maria A. Karalexi

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Marios K. Georgakis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Nick Dessypris

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Joana Bastos

Instituto Português de Oncologia Francisco Gentil

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