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Validation of short term recall of mobile phone use for the Interphone study

Authors :
S. J. Hepworth
Tiina Salminen
Gabriele Berg
K. G. Blaasaas
Ivano Iavarone
Päivi Kurttio
Siegal Sadetzki
Martine Vrijheid
Angela Chetrit
Lucile Montestrucq
Alistair Woodward
Joachim Schüz
Bruce K. Armstrong
Lesley Richardson
Roger C Parslow
Graham G. Giles
Stefan Lönn
Isabelle Deltour
Julianne Brown
Tore Tynes
Elisabeth Cardis
Christoffer Johansen
Susanna Lagorio
Martine Hours
Anssi Auvinen
Matthew Carroll
Helle Collatz Christensen
Patricia A. McKinney
Maria Feychting
Lars Klaeboe
Source :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine. 63:237-243
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
BMJ, 2006.

Abstract

Aim: To validate short term recall of mobile phone use within Interphone, an international collaborative case control study of tumours of the brain, acoustic nerve, and salivary glands related to mobile telephone use. Methods: Mobile phone use of 672 volunteers in 11 countries was recorded by operators or through the use of software modified phones, and compared to use recalled six months later using the Interphone study questionnaire. Agreement between recalled and actual phone use was analysed using both categorical and continuous measures of number and duration of phone calls. Results: Correlations between recalled and actual phone use were moderate to high (ranging from 0.5 to 0.8 across countries) and of the same order for number and duration of calls. The kappa statistic demonstrated fair to moderate agreement for both number and duration of calls (weighted kappa ranging from 0.20 to 0.60 across countries). On average, subjects underestimated the number of calls per month (geometric mean ratio of recalled to actual = 0.92, 95% CI 0.85 to 0.99), whereas duration of calls was overestimated (geometric mean ratio = 1.42, 95% CI 1.29 to 1.56). The ratio of recalled to actual use increased with level of use, showing underestimation in light users and overestimation in heavy users. There was substantial heterogeneity in this ratio between countries. Inter-individual variation was also large, and increased with level of use. Conclusions: Volunteer subjects recalled their recent phone use with moderate systematic error and substantial random error. This large random error can be expected to reduce the power of the Interphone study to detect an increase in risk of brain, acoustic nerve, and parotid gland tumours with increasing mobile phone use, if one exists.

Details

ISSN :
13510711
Volume :
63
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33a977aaba6c431544643679b49ed861