A
Alisa M. Goldstein
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 309
Citations - 24663
Alisa M. Goldstein is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Population. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 297 publications receiving 22773 citations. Previous affiliations of Alisa M. Goldstein include United States Department of Health and Human Services.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Epstein-Barr virus microRNAs and lung cancer.
Jill Koshiol,Margaret L. Gulley,Yingdong Zhao,Maurizia Rubagotti,Francesco M. Marincola,Melissa Rotunno,Weihua Tang,Andrew W. Bergen,Pier Alberto Bertazzi,Debasmita Roy,Angela Cecilia Pesatori,Ilona Linnoila,Dirk P. Dittmer,Alisa M. Goldstein,Neil E. Caporaso,Lisa M. McShane,Ena Wang,M. T. Landi +17 more
TL;DR: The first analysis of viral microRNAs (miRNAs) in lung cancer, with a focus on Epstein–Barr virus, found little evidence of EBV in lung tumour tissue and discrepancies between microarray- and qPCR-based strategies highlight the difficulty of validating molecular markers of disease.
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Parenchymal-stromal interactions in neoplasia. Theoretical considerations and observations in melanocytic neoplasia.
TL;DR: The paper briefly reviews the reciprocal and continuous reciprocal interactions between epithelia, mesenchyme, and extracellular matrix in the development and maintenance of organismal form in multicellular organisms in the animal kingdom and describes the progressive changes in parenchymalstromal interactions in melanocytic neoplastic development and progression.
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Detecting gene‐environment interactions using a case‐control design
TL;DR: This work assessed the sample size required for detecting gene‐environment (G × E) interactions in a case‐control study of complex diseases and suggested that large numbers of cases and controls will be required for some odds ratio and exposure frequency combinations.
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Lack of germline CDK6 mutations in familial melanoma.
Michael Shennan,Anne-Claire Badin,Scott Walsh,Anne Summers,Lynn From,Mary McKenzie,Alisa M. Goldstein,Margaret A. Tucker,David Hogg,Norman J. Lassam +9 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that germline mutations in CDK6 do not make a significant contribution to melanoma predisposition.
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A genome-wide linkage scan for body mass index on Framingham Heart Study families.
TL;DR: The results are in agreement with some of the recently published reports on BMI using various data sets including the Framingham Heart Study data.