Main

High-voltage overhead power lines (HVOLs) are one of the major sources of extremely low-frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MFs), considered a possible risk factor for childhood leukaemia. In the absence of any underlying biological hypothesis, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified ELF-MF as possible carcinogens (group 2B), based on epidemiological observations over more than two decades (IARC, 2002). The first meta-analyses concluded that exposure to ELF-MF levels of at least 0.3 μT was significantly associated with an increased incidence of childhood acute leukaemia (AL) (odds ratio (OR)=1.7 (1.2–2.3) for exposures 0.3 μT (Greenland et al, 2000) and OR=2.0 (1.3–3.3) for exposures 0.4 μT (Ahlbom et al, 2000)). A recent meta-analysis of the studies published after 2000 (Kheifets et al, 2010) generated consistent but weaker results (OR=1.4 (0.9–2.4) for exposures 0.3 μT). The large British study by Draper et al (2005) focused on the proximity of VHV-HVOL and showed an association between AL and residence at birth <200 m from a VHV-HVOL (OR=1.7 (1.1–2.5)) and, to a lesser extent, between 200 and 600 m from a VHV-HVOL (OR=1.2 (1.0–1.5)). With the same data, the relative risk was not significantly increased for estimates of ELF-MF 0.4 μT (Kroll et al, 2010). High-voltage overhead power lines account for only a fraction of ELF-MF exposure, but, in their near vicinity, constitute the main source of background exposure (Schüz et al, 2000; Maslanyj et al, 2007).

The aim of the present study was to test whether the risk of AL was increased in the vicinity of HVOL, where children were expected to encounter higher residential exposure to ELF-MF. We followed a two-step approach. The present one aims at investigating the relationship between AL and distance to HVOL. The second step will rely on calculated residential exposure to ELF-EMF based on characteristics of the neighbouring HVOL. The study, the first in France, was based on the geolocation of the last address and covered the entire mainland over a recent period (2002–2007), on an exhaustive basis, free from participation bias, and was based on a geographic information system (GIS) using precise and recent databases to locate the dwellings and HVOL.

Materials and methods

The Geocap case–control study

The Geocap case–control study included all the 2779 French childhood AL cases aged <15 years at the end of the year of diagnosis, diagnosed between 1 January 2002 and 31 December 2007, residing in mainland France (excluding Corsica for which HVOL information was not available). The cases were obtained from the French National Registry of Childhood Hematopoietic Malignancies (Lacour et al, 2010).

Over the same period (2002–2007), six yearly sets of 5000 control addresses were randomly sampled from the paediatric population of mainland France by the National Institute for Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE), using the income and council tax databases of the French households. These databases contain the addresses and income information of all the households in France, irrespective of employment status, and list the children in each household by year of birth. The sample was stratified on the 94 French mainland administrative areas (Départements). The individual variables available for the controls were the year of birth, number of children in the household and last address. Demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of the municipality (Commune) of residence were also used as contextual variables. The sample of 30 000 controls was closely representative of the source population in terms of age and number of children in the household, and in terms of contextual variables, that is, size of the urban unit, median income, proportion of blue-collar workers, proportion of subjects who successfully completed high school (baccalaureate holders) and proportion of homeowners in the Commune of residence (Sermage-Faure et al, 2012).

Geocoding

The residence considered for geolocation was the residence at the time of diagnosis for the cases and that at the time of inclusion for the controls. Residential histories, particularly addresses at birth, were not available. The method for geocoding the addresses of cases and controls was compiled, checked for consistency and corrected when necessary by GEOCIBLE, an outside service provider, in close cooperation with the epidemiology research team. The addresses were geocoded blind to case/control status, using the MAPINFO GIS, NAVTEQ street databases and detailed vectorized maps from the National Geographic Institute (IGN). Automatic processes were checked and completed by visual inspection of maps when necessary. Ultimately, only 3% of the cases and 1% of the controls could not be located more precisely than by their Commune of residence and were allocated the coordinates of their Commune town hall.

In the Navteq and IGN databases, the geocodes are given at the middle of the street in front of the number in the street (i.e., the front door, the entrance of the plot or the projection of centre of the plot along the street), generally corresponding to the mailbox residence. Most often in urban areas and in collective housing, the mailbox is attached to the building of residence. However, especially in countryside, the house can be at a distance from the entrance of the plot, where the mailbox is.

Depending on whether the databases enabled location of the home directly or by extrapolation from the nearest or more distant neighbours, the coordinates were assigned a degree of uncertainty along the street ranging from 20 m (exact number in the database) to the size of a Commune (Table 1). The scale of uncertainty provided by Geocible had been determined previously, based on the size of the objects to locate and on the mean differences between estimated and measured geocodes. The best geocoded addresses were assigned an uncertainty of 20 m, equal to the mean value of the estimated coordinates given by the GIS and the center of the house. Altogether, 1946 cases (70%) and 23 171 controls (77%) were located by their exact number in the street (best geocoded addresses, uncertainty of 20 m), whereas 303 cases (11%) and 2459 controls (8.6%) were located by a segment of a short street or by a close number (uncertainty of 50–100 m).

Table 1 Distribution of the cases and controls by category of uncertainty of location by geocoding

In addition to the coordinates obtained for all the postal addresses of the Geocap sample, another set of coordinates was also estimated using photographic views obtained from Street View (Google Maps), Géoportail (IGN data) and the French cadaster, when available. This was possible for 72% of the cases and 69% of the controls living <200 m from a HVOL, considering the uncertainty, and used to position the building of residence.

HVOL characteristics and distance from the nearest HVOL

There are 77 400 km of HVOL in France. There are five main types: HVOL of 400 kV (13 350 km), 225 kV (21 200 km), 150 kV (1050 km) and 90 or 63 kV (41 800 km). The HVOLs have been precisely mapped by RTE (Réseau de Transport d’Electricité), the French utility in charge of electricity transmission, based on the utility’s own database, in which pylons and sections of lines are accurately located, and on the most precise local maps of the national geographic institute (IGN). The distances from the closest HVOLs were estimated by GEOCIBLE.

Statistical analysis

All the statistical analyses were performed using the SAS software package (version 9; SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). The ORs, their 95% confidence intervals and two-sided P-values were estimated by unconditional logistic regression adjusted for age in 5-year categories and Département. Additional analyses stratified by age category were adjusted for age in years.

The subjects were classified in terms of their distance from the closest HVOL (<50, 50–99, 100–199, 200–599 and 600 m). The very high voltage lines, 225 and 400 kV (VHV-HVOL), and the high voltage lines, 63, 90 and 150 kV (HV-HVOL), were separated as dwellings located 50 m from VHV-HVOL are expected to be more frequently exposed to higher ELF-MF than those located 50 m from HV-HVOL (Maslanyj et al, 2009). The inverse distance function was used to test for the existence of a trend in AL incidence, assigning 0 to the dwellings located at least 600 m from an HVOL.

All the main analyses were conducted on the whole study sample, without any selection by address uncertainty. The analyses were conducted on all the cases and also stratified by age group – <5 years old covering most of the incidence peak and 5 years old – and for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) alone.

All the analyses were performed taking the same baseline as reference category, that is, the group of children who lived in Communes with no part of their territory within 600 m of a HVOL, after accounting for geocoding uncertainty. Thus, the baseline included all the residences definitely located 600 m from a HVOL, even if they were geocoded with the highest uncertainty. Additional sensitivity analyses also included the subjects living at least 600 m from a HVOL in the reference category, even when the Commune had a part of its territory within 600 m of a HVOL, in order to account for the possibility that the baseline category might select residences in relation with an AL risk factor.

The 67 cases and 203 controls who lived in a Commune partially located within 600 m of a line but who could not be individually located better than at the town hall were considered to have missing data for the distances from HVOL.

Supplementary analyses were performed to test the robustness of the results and account for the spatial extent of the house, by restriction to the best geocoded addresses (uncertainty <20 m), or by modifying the distance cutoffs around the a priori value of 50 m (30, 40, 60 and 70 m). In addition, for sensitivity analyses, when the distances using the main geocoding and the photographic views were available, the cases and controls were classified in the category ‘<50 m from a HVOL’, either when the distance from photographic views was <50 m, or when at least one of the two estimated distances was <50 m, or when both the estimated distances were <50 m.

The analyses were also stratified by contextual socioeconomic variables extracted from the 1999 census data for the Commune of residence, including the urban status of the Commune, median income of the households, proportion of blue-collar workers and proportion of baccalaureate holders. Additional analyses were performed after excluding the cases and controls who lived <5 km from a nuclear power plant, in order to rule out possible confounding by residence in the proximity of a nuclear power plant, which was associated with AL in the present study (Sermage-Faure et al, 2012).

Results

Table 2 describes the cases registered from 2002 to 2007 by age, gender and leukaemia subtype, on the basis of the distance of their residences from the closest VHV-HVOL or HV-HVOL.

Table 2 Description of the cases included in the study, by the distance between their residence and the closest HVOL and by voltage category (very high (225–400 kV) or high (63–150 kV)) over the period 2002–2007

The 610 cases (22.0%) and 7061 controls (23.5%) who were living in a Commune entirely located at least 600 m from any HVOL constituted the baseline of the models. Living within 50 m of the closest HVOL, all voltages considered together, was not associated with AL (OR=1.2 (0.8–1.9)) (Table 3). However, while no association was observed with residences close to HV-HVOL (OR=1.0 (0.6–1.7)), an association was evidenced for children who lived within 50 m of a VHV-HVOL (OR=1.7 (0.9–3.6)). In contrast, the ORs were close to one for the residences located 50 m from a HVOL, even a VHV-HVOL, and no statistically significant trend was observed with the inverse of the distance (P=0.28 for distance from VHV-HVOL). The results for ALL were very similar (OR=1.9 (0.9–4.0) at <50 m from a VHV-HVOL).

Table 3 Association between childhood acute leukaemia and distance to the closest HVOL by category of voltage (very high (225–400 kV) or high (63–150 kV)) over the period 2002–2007

Splitting the sample into children aged <5 years and those aged 5 years showed that the association was only observed for the younger group (Table 4). In that age group, living within 50 m of the closest VHV-HVOL was significantly associated with AL (OR=2.6 (1.0–7.0)), with a significant trend with the inverse of the distance (P=0.03), whereas there was no association for the older group (OR=1.0 (0.3–3.3) living within 50 m of the closest VHV-HVOL).

Table 4 Association between childhood AL and distance from HVOLs over the period 2002–2007, stratified by age and urban status of the Commune of residence

Living within 50 m of a VHV-HVOL was not associated with AL in the Communes of urban units with a population >100 000 (Table 4), but an association was observed for the less urban categories of Commune. The same pattern was observed for the under-5-year age group (data not shown). The association between AL and living <50 m from a VHV-HVOL appeared more marked, although not significantly so, in the Communes with less-favorable contextual socioeconomic characteristics: median income or percentage baccalaureate holders lower than the median value for the controls; percentage blue-collar workers greater than the median value for the controls. Adjustments for those contextual variables, either separately or jointly, did not change the estimates.

No case and only two controls lived within 5 km of a nuclear power plant and <200 m from a VHV-HVOL; excluding them did not modify the results.

Sensitivity analyses restricted to the best geocoded subjects (uncertainty 20 m) generated slightly stronger results (OR=2.1 (0.9–4.7) for living within 50 m of a VHV-HVOL) (Table 5). The results were also unchanged when the cutoffs were 10 and 20 m above or below the a priori value of 50 m, and when the baseline was extended to include the subjects living >600 m from a HVOL, even if their Commune of residence had parts located <600 m from a line (data not shown). Lastly, in the sensitivity analyses using the main geocoding distance and that based on photographic views when both were available (Table 5), the ORs remained of the same order of magnitude but the associations were no longer significant (OR=1.3 (0.5–3.7) for distance <50 m based on photographic views, OR=1.7(0.6–4.8) for both distances <50 m and OR=1.5 (0.8–3.1) for at least one distance <50 m from a VHV-HVOL). For 0–4-year-old children, this was also the case (OR=2.5 (0.6–10.5) for distance <50 m based on photographic views, OR=3.5 (0.8–15.1) for both distances <50 m and OR=2.3 (0.9–6.0) for at least one distance <50 m).

Table 5 Sensitivity analyses of the association between childhood acute leukaemia and distance to the closest HVOL by category of voltage (very high (225–400 kV) or high (63–150 kV)) over the period 2002–2007, for all ages and the 0–4-years age group

Discussion

The present analysis of the Geocap nationwide case–control study was carried out to test the hypothesis that living close to HVOL, particularly VHV-HVOL, was associated with an increased incidence of childhood AL. The study focused on HVOL, a major source of exposure to ELF-MF in neighbouring residences (Schüz et al, 2000; Maslanyj et al, 2007). The proximity of HVOL to the residence of all the subjects was reliably evaluated without any selection and using the same process over all mainland France and over the 2002–2007 period. The results for living <50 m from a 225 or 400 kV HVOL were compatible with the IARC conclusions. There was no association beyond that distance. The association at a short distance was not observed for children aged 5 years or those living in the most urban Communes.

The study covered a recent and relatively short period, and historical databases were therefore available for the entire period. One of the main strengths of the Geocap study is that it was designed to avoid selection biases. The cases were identified by the national registry, which complies with the international criteria required for cancer registration and classification, and achieves a high degree of completeness, by active research with almost three sources per case on average (Clavel et al, 2004; Lacour et al, 2010). Similarly, the recruitment of the controls did not require their active participation, preventing self-selection by socioeconomic status. De facto, the control sample was closely representative of the paediatric population on the basis of the sociodemographic contextual criteria (Table 1).

All the cases’ and controls’ addresses were obtained and geocoded, and the distances were calculated from objective databases free from any recall bias and blind to case/control status. This is another strength of the Geocap study in that it enabled minimisation of differential misclassifications. The distances estimated from the GISs were assumed to rank, as adequately as possible, the cases and controls by the true distance of their dwellings from the HVOL. The databases used to locate the lines were very precise. In particular, pylons were located with an uncertainty of 2.5 m in the RTE database.

Interestingly, the results were strengthened when the analyses were restricted to the best geocoded addresses. The 67 cases and 203 controls (<2% of the subjects) whose addresses were not precise enough to enable their location close to the HVOL probably had no substantial impact on the results, given the expected distribution of the few subjects with respect to the distance from VHV-HVOL (about 0.2% of the controls <50 m from VHV-HVOL). For the association to have been due to the Unknown category, the true addresses would have to have been within 50 m of a VHV-HVOL for none of the unclassified cases and for about 15% of the unclassified controls, which is very unlikely. The sensitivity analyses were consistent with the main results.

The Geocap study was designed to avoid selection and differential misclassification biases, which are common shortcomings of case–control studies on environmental factors, particularly ELF-MF (Mezei and Kheifets, 2006; Kheifets and Oksuzyan, 2008; Schüz and Ahlbom, 2008). The study included no individual data other than age and address, which were obtained for all the cases and controls. Therefore, potential AL risk factors such as birth order, breastfeeding, day-care attendance and pesticide exposure were not available. However, conditionally on age and the sociodemographic characteristics of the Commune of residence, which were accounted for in adjusted or stratified analyses, known or suspected risk factors are not likely to differ markedly within vs outside the 50-m distance from the VHV-HVOL. The study may have suffered from non-differential misclassifications, particularly because of the uncertainty of the geolocation of the homes, or because the period considered, that is, residence at diagnosis or interview, may not belong to the most relevant time window, or because the small numbers did not enable separation of the 400- and 225-kV VHV-HVOL or splitting the smallest category of distance. Therefore, the relationship between living close to VHV-HVOL and AL is probably not overestimated. As a registry-based study, the Geocap study considered the addresses at the time of diagnosis for the cases and at the time of inclusion for the controls. It did not cover the whole residential history since conception, and earlier or longer time windows may be more relevant in childhood AL. In the Escale case–control study (data collected in 2003–2004), the household had not moved during the index pregnancy or childhood for 46% of the controls <15 years, and 60% of those <5 years (Amigou et al, 2011). In the present study, the relationship was only observed for children <5 years, which might be compatible with a smaller impact of misclassifications, due to moves, of early exposures related to the proximity of VHV-HVOL. The relationship was not observed in children living in the most populated urban Communes.

The present study exclusively addressed the question, recurrent in France, of the risk of childhood AL close to HVOL. If living <50 m from HVOL is causally related to AL, it is expected to induce an excess of less than one new case <15 years per year in France, under steady conditions of residency close to VHV-HVOL. The distance of the residence from a HVOL is by no means a perfect surrogate for individual exposure to ELF-MF because of the proximity of the lines. Individual in situ measurements would be more suitable exposure indicators, provided that they were standardized, accurate and precise measurements, and that no selection bias (and no participation bias) limited their interpretation. Residential proximity of a VHV-HVOL was considered an indicator of increased probability of high residential exposure to ELF-MF, with the hypothesis that other sources of exposure to ELF-MF would be independent of the presence of the line and thus would be distributed similarly for the children living <50 m from a VHV-HVOL and those living further away (Schüz et al, 2000; Maslanyj et al, 2007). The study combined stringent voltage (225 kV) and distance (<50 m) conditions with a high degree of accuracy in the geocoding process, in order to identify the individuals who most probably had the highest exposures to ELF-MF in the population study. Exposure to ELF-MF depends on many sources and, regarding power lines, on many other parameters than distance, particularly current load and type of pylon (also related to the line voltage). Conversely, the distance from VHV-HVOL might also be an indicator of environmental exposures and lifestyle factors related to the vicinity of lines other than ELF-MF.

In a descriptive analysis of studies of ELF-MF exposure in 4452 homes in the United Kingdom (UKCCS, 1999) and 1835 homes in Germany (Schüz et al, 2000), only a small number of dwellings were located within 50 m of a HVOL (93 homes), 16 of which were close to a 220–400 kV HVOL (Maslanyj et al, 2009). Extremely low-frequency magnetic field exposure 0.4 μT was more prevalent in the latter homes (18.8%) than in those close to 11–132 kV HVOL (6.5%), even though the absolute numbers of dwellings with ELF-MF exposure 0.4 μT were similar (three and five homes, respectively). Therefore, in this study, the absence of an association close to HV-HVOL lines, where the prevalence of exposed residences is assumed to be lower, is poorly informative with respect to the hypothesis that ELF-MF may have a role in childhood AL.

This hypothesis will be investigated more precisely in a future stage of the Geocap study. RTE is to calculate individual estimates of the exposure to ELF-MF for all the Geocap subjects located close to a HVOL, blind to case/control status. The exposure estimates will take into account the particular characteristics of each of the neighbouring lines (pylons geometry, height and type of cable, ground wires and so on), the average annual current load for each of the identified lines, the time-distribution percentiles of the current load and the particular location of the residence with respect to the closest line spans (Bessou et al, 2013).

This is the first French contribution to the issue of ELF-MF, HVOL and childhood AL. The results are compatible with the first meta-analyses published in 2000 (Ahlbom et al, 2000; Greenland et al, 2000), the recent review by Schüz and Ahlbom (2008) and the most recent meta-analysis summarizing the studies of the last decade (Kheifets et al, 2010). While no underlying biological mechanism has been advanced to date in support of the epidemiological observation (WHO, 2007), the IARC classification of ELF-MF as a possible carcinogen (IARC, 2002) has not been strongly challenged. The study by Draper et al (2005) based on residence at birth and covering more than three decades (1962–1995) revealed associations with longer distances from power lines than previously envisaged, far above the threshold usually recognised as generating ELF-MF greater than background exposures, and with a positive trend with decreasing distance. Extremely low-frequency magnetic fields were estimated secondarily in the same study, and then considered unlikely to be the only explanation (Swanson, 2008; Kroll et al, 2010) for the observed relationship with distance. Overall, the number of exposed newborns was small because five AL cases and three controls resided at birth within 50 m of a HVOL (mainly VHV-HVOL) (Draper et al, 2005), and two AL cases and one control were assumed to be exposed to at least 0.4 μT (Swanson, 2008). In the present study, we observed no significant trend with decreasing distance to VHV-HVOL.

Recently, in a commentary on the most recent papers by Kroll et al (2010) and Kheifets et al (2010), Schmiedel and Blettner (2010) drew attention to the current limitations of epidemiology with regard to affording new insights in the field and answering questions in the absence of satisfactory biological models. Geocap was designed for quantitative modelling and the study of coexposures, and may thus be considered an appropriate tool for contributing to knowledge in the field.

Conclusion

In conclusion, the present study has generated additional findings, based on a recent nationwide unselected population-based study, that support the hypothesis that living <50 m from a 225 or 400 kV HVOL may be associated with an increased incidence of childhood AL. No increase in risk was observed further from those lines and no increase in childhood AL risk was detected within 50 m of the 63–150 kV HVOL. Model-based estimates of ELF-MF exposures will be used to investigate for potential involvement of ELF-MF in the observed association.