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Anthony S. Robbins

Researcher at American Cancer Society

Publications -  38
Citations -  6476

Anthony S. Robbins is an academic researcher from American Cancer Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Cancer registry. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 36 publications receiving 5735 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony S. Robbins include Emory University & Stanford University.

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Cancer treatment and survivorship statistics, 2014

TL;DR: The number of cancer survivors continues to increase due to the aging and growth of the population and improvements in early detection and treatment, and current treatment patterns for the most common cancer types are described based on information in the National Cancer Data Base and the SEER and SEER‐Medicare linked databases.
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Childhood and adolescent cancer statistics, 2014

TL;DR: Estimates of the number of new cancer cases and deaths for children and adolescents in the United States are provided and an overview of risk factors, symptoms, treatment, and long‐term and late effects for common pediatric cancers are provided.
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Comparison of Cases Captured in the National Cancer Data Base with Those in Population-based Central Cancer Registries

TL;DR: Findings illustrate the strengths and limitations of NCDB as a resource for nationwide data on cancer diagnosis, treatment, and survival and highlight the geographic- and site-specific variation in N CDB case coverage.
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What's the relative risk? A method to directly estimate risk ratios in cohort studies of common outcomes.

TL;DR: The authors argue that for cohort studies, the use of logistic regression should be sharply curtailed, and that instead, binomial regression be used to directly estimate RRs and associated CIs.
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Racial Disparities in Stage-Specific Colorectal Cancer Mortality Rates From 1985 to 2008

TL;DR: The black-white disparities in CRC mortality increased for each stage of the disease, but the overall disparity in overall mortality was largely driven by trends for late-stage disease.