F
Francoise Ménégoz
Publications - 4
Citations - 266
Francoise Ménégoz is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Odds ratio & Risk factor. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 247 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
An international case-control study of adult glioma and meningioma: the role of head trauma
Susan Preston-Martin,Janice M. Pogoda,Brigitte Schlehofer,Maria Blettner,Geoffrey R. Howe,Philip Ryan,Francoise Ménégoz,Graham G. Giles,Ylva Rodvall,N. W. Choi,Julian Little,Annie Arslan +11 more
TL;DR: Evidence for elevated brain tumour risk after head trauma was strongest for meningiomas in men, and findings related to sports should be interpreted cautiously due to cultural variability in the data and the lack of complete data on physical exercise in general which appeared to be protective.
Journal ArticleDOI
Occupational risk factors for low grade and high grade glioma: results from an international case control study of adult brain tumours.
Brigitte Schlehofer,Iris Hettinger,Philip Ryan,Maria Blettner,Susan Preston-Martin,Julian Little,Annie Arslan,Anders Ahlbom,Graham G. Giles,Geoffrey R. Howe,Francoise Ménégoz,Ylva Rodvall,Won Choi,Jürgen Wahrendorf +13 more
TL;DR: The results do not provide evidence of a strong association between occupational exposures and glioma development, and none of the 20 substance groups was positively associated withglioma risk.
Journal ArticleDOI
An International Case-Control Study of Adult Diet and Brain Tumor Risk: A Histology-Specific Analysis by Food Group
Mary Beth Terry,Geoffrey R. Howe,Janice M. Pogoda,Fang Fang Zhang,Anders Ahlbom,Won S. Choi,Graham G. Giles,Julian Little,Flora Lubin,Francoise Ménégoz,Philip Ryan,Brigitte Schlehofer,Susan Preston-Martin +12 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that selected dietary food groups may be associated with adult gliomas and its subtypes but not meningiomas, and inverse associations between some vegetable groups and glioma risk are found.
Journal ArticleDOI
Contacts with animals and humans as risk factors for adult brain tumours. An international case–control study
Francoise Ménégoz,Julian Little,M Colonna,Annie Arslan,Susan Preston-Martin,Brigitte Schlehofer,Maria Blettner,Geoffrey R. Howe,Philip Ryan,Graham G. Giles,Ylva Rodvall,W.N Choi +11 more
TL;DR: With some exceptions, results indicate no association between either the type of brain tumour and contacts with animals, or with occupations that include a high level of contact with animals or a highlevel ofcontact with humans.