Abstract

Occupational magnetic field (MF) exposure has been suggested as a risk factor for breast cancer in both men and women. Due to the rarity of this disease in men, most epidemiologic studies investigating this relationship have been limited by small sample sizes. Herein, associations of several measures of occupational MF exposure with breast cancer in men were investigated using data from the population‐based case–control component of the Canadian National Enhanced Cancer Surveillance System. Lifetime job histories were provided by 115 cases and 570 controls. Average MF exposure of individual jobs was classified into three categories (<0.3, 0.3 to <0.6, or ≥0.6 μT) through expert blinded review of participant's lifetime occupational histories. The impact of highest average and cumulative MF exposure, as well as exposure duration and specific exposure‐time windows, on cancer risk was examined using logistic regression. The proportion of cases (25%) with a highest average exposure of ≥0.3 μT was higher than among controls (22%). We found an elevated risk of breast cancer in men who were exposed to ≥0.6 μT (odds ratio [OR] = 1.80, 95% CI = 0.82–3.95) when compared to those with exposures <0.3 μT. Those exposed to occupational MF fields for at least 30 years had a nearly threefold increase in risk of breast cancer (OR = 2.77, 95% CI = 0.98–7.82) when compared to those with background levels of exposure. Findings for the other time‐related MF variables were inconsistent. Our analysis, in one of the largest case–control studies of breast cancer in men conducted to date, provides limited support for the hypothesis that exposure to MF increases the risk breast cancer in men.

Highlights

  • While breast cancer is one of the most common cancers among women, it rarely occurs in men

  • In ­addition, disorders associated with estrogen/androgen imbalances such as Klinefelter syndrome, appear to Magnetic Fields and Male Breast Cancer increase the risk of breast cancer in men [6, 7], overall accounts for few cases

  • This study did not detect a clear association between occupational magnetic fields (MF) exposure and breast cancer in men based on highest average exposure, the estimated OR for a highest average MF exposure of ≥0.6 μT was elevated

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Summary

Introduction

While breast cancer is one of the most common cancers among women, it rarely occurs in men. There are important advantages to studying the relationship between occupational and environmental exposures and breast cancer in men as they have far fewer reproductive risk factors than women. Occupational exposure to magnetic fields (MF) is a suspected risk factor for breast cancer in men and the International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified extremely low-­frequency MFs as a possible carcinogen based largely on epidemiological studies of leukemia [9]. One U.S case–control study (227 cases, 300 controls) observed an increased risk of breast cancer among men exposed to MF in their job (odds ratio [OR] = 1.8, 95% CI: 1.0–3.7) relative to those with only background levels of exposure; the strongest relationship was found among those employed in electric trades and related occupations (OR = 6.0, 95% CI: 1.7–2.1) [10]. MFs have been hypothesized to influence cancer risk through promoting effects on the growth of tumors [30], the ability to investigate the impact of exposure characteristics such as duration may be important in assessing the relationship between MFs and breast cancer risk in men

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