F
Freddie Bray
Researcher at International Agency for Research on Cancer
Publications - 452
Citations - 345102
Freddie Bray is an academic researcher from International Agency for Research on Cancer. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Population. The author has an hindex of 111, co-authored 402 publications receiving 262938 citations. Previous affiliations of Freddie Bray include University of Oslo.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prostate cancer incidence in 43 populations worldwide: An analysis of time trends overall and by age group
Cindy Ke Zhou,David P. Check,Joannie Lortet-Tieulent,Mathieu Laversanne,Ahmedin Jemal,Jacques Ferlay,Freddie Bray,Michael B. Cook,Susan S. Devesa +8 more
TL;DR: Global geographic variation remained substantial for both overall and age‐specific incidence rates regardless of levels of PSA testing, with the lowest rates consistently in Asia.
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Lung cancer in Europe in 2000: epidemiology, prevention, and early detection.
TL;DR: In this paper, a clear dose-response relation between lung cancer risk and the number of cigarettes smoked per day, degree of inhalation, and age at initiation of smoking was found.
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Fifty years of cancer incidence: CI5 I-IX.
D. Max Parkin,Jacques Ferlay,Maria Paula Curado,Freddie Bray,Brenda K. Edwards,Hai Rim Shin,David Forman +6 more
TL;DR: The construction and composition of the CI5 databases are described, and examples of how they can be used to prepare tables and graphs comparing incidence rates between populations are provided.
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Changes in colorectal cancer incidence in seven high-income countries: a population-based study.
Marzieh Araghi,Isabelle Soerjomataram,Aude Bardot,Jacques Ferlay,Citadel J Cabasag,David S. Morrison,Prithwish De,Hanna E. Tervonen,Paul M. Walsh,Oliver Bucher,Gerda Engholm,Christopher Jackson,Carol McClure,Ryan Woods,Nathalie Saint-Jacques,Eileen Morgan,David Ransom,Vicky Thursfield,Bjørn Møller,Suzanne Leonfellner,Marianne Grønlie Guren,Freddie Bray,Melina Arnold +22 more
TL;DR: A substantial increase in the incidence of colorectal cancer in people younger than 50 years in some of the countries in this study is noted, and non-linear cohort effects were more pronounced for rectal than for colon cancer.
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Cervical cancer as a priority for prevention in different world regions: an evaluation using years of life lost.
TL;DR: The fact that most of the loss of life is preventable, and that simple technologies have been developed that make this practicable, means that cervical cancer has an even higher profile from the perspective of resource allocation in low income settings.