D
Donald F. Austin
Researcher at Oregon Health & Science University
Publications - 77
Citations - 9406
Donald F. Austin is an academic researcher from Oregon Health & Science University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 77 publications receiving 9070 citations. Previous affiliations of Donald F. Austin include California Health and Human Services Agency & Veterans Health Administration.
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Journal Article
Smoking and Drinking in Relation to Oral and Pharyngeal Cancer
William J. Blot,Joseph K. McLaughlin,Joseph K. McLaughlin,Deborah M. Winn,Donald F. Austin,Raymond S. Greenberg,Susan Preston-Martin,Leslie Bernstein,Janet B. Schoenberg,Annette Stemhagen,Joseph F. Fraumeni +10 more
TL;DR: Risks of oropharyngeal cancer tended to combine more in a multiplicative than additive fashion and were increased more than 35-fold among those who consumed two or more packs of cigarettes and more than four alcoholic drinks/day.
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Racial Differences in Survival From Breast Cancer: Results of the National Cancer Institute Black/White Cancer Survival Study
J. William Eley,Holly A. Hill,Vivien W. Chen,Donald F. Austin,Margaret N. Wesley,Hyman B. Muss,Raymond S. Greenberg,Ralph J. Coates,Pelayo Correa,Carol K. Redmond,Carrie P. Hunter,Allen A. Herman,Robert J. Kurman,Robert S. Blacklow,Sam Shapiro,Brenda K. Edwards +15 more
TL;DR: Almost 75% of the racial difference in survival was explained by the prognostic factors studied, and Sociodemographic variables appeared to act largely through racial differences in stage at diagnosis, which may be amenable to change through improved access to and use of screening for black women.
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Effects of treatment on fertility in long-term survivors of childhood or adolescent cancer.
Julianne Byrne,John J. Mulvihill,Max H. Myers,Roger R. Connelly,Naughton,Krauss Mr,Sandra C. Steinhorn,D D Hassinger,Donald F. Austin,Bragg K +9 more
TL;DR: Cox regression analysis showed that cancer survivors who married and were presumed to be at risk of pregnancy were less likely than their sibling controls to have ever begun a pregnancy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Early menopause in long-term survivors of cancer during adolescence
Julianne Byrne,Thomas R. Fears,Mitchell H. Gail,David Pee,Roger R. Connelly,Donald F. Austin,Grace F. Holmes,Frederick F. Holmes,Howard B. Latourette,J. Wister Meigs,Louise C. Strong,Max H. Myers,John J. Mulvihill +12 more
TL;DR: Treatment for cancer during adolescence carries a substantial risk for early menopause among women still menstruating at age 21, and increasing use of radiation and chemotherapy suggests that these women should be made aware of their smaller window of fertility so that they can plan their families accordingly.
Journal ArticleDOI
Radiation dose and second cancer risk in patients treated for cancer of the cervix.
John D. Boice,G. Engholm,Ruth A. Kleinerman,Maria Blettner,Marilyn Stovall,Hermann Lisco,William C. Moloney,Donald F. Austin,Antonio Bosch,Diane Cookfair,Edward T. Krementz,Howard B. Latourette,James A. Merrill,Lester J. Peters,Milford D. Schulz,Hans H. Storm,Elisabeth Bjorkholm,Folke Pettersson,C. M.Janine Bell,Michel P Coleman,Patricia Fraser,Frank Neal,P. Prior,N. Won Choi,Thomas Greg Hislop,Maria Koch,Nancy Kreiger,Dorothy Robb,D Robson,D. H. Thomson,H. Lochmuller,Dietrich von Fournier,Rolf Frischkorn,Kjell E. Kjorstad,Arja Rimpelä,Marie Helene Pejovic,Vera Pompe Kirn,Hanna Stankusova,Franco Berrino,Kristjan Sigurdsson,George B. Hutchison,Brian MacMahon,Gerda Engholm +42 more
TL;DR: Risks were highest among long-term survivors and appeared concentrated among women irradiated at relatively younger ages, and radiation was not found to increase the overall risk of cancers of the small intestine, colon, ovary, vulva, connective tissue, breast, Hodgkin's disease, multiple myeloma, or chronic lymphocytic leukemia.