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.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The impact of historical breastfeeding practices on the incidence of cancer in France in 2015.
Kevin D. Shield,Laure Dossus,Agnès Fournier,Agnès Fournier,Claire Marant Micallef,Sabina Rinaldi,Agnès Rogel,Isabelle Heard,Sophie Pilleron,Freddie Bray,Isabelle Soerjomataram +10 more
TL;DR: The historically low breastfeeding prevalence and duration in France led to numerous avoidable cancer cases in 2015, with breastfeeding preventing 163 ovarian cancer cases.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer incidence and cancer control in Bangkok, Thailand: Results from the cancer registry 2011-15 and projections to 2035.
TL;DR: The Bangkok and other Thai population-based cancer registries are essential in measuring the population-level impact of tobacco control, HBV and HPV vaccination, cervical and colorectal cancer screening, and via survival estimation, the effectiveness of cancer care, according to this report.
EUROCOURSE: towards Optimisation of the Use of Cancer Registries for Scientific Excellence in Cancer Research in Europe
Jan Willem Coebergh,C.J.G. van den Hurk,Huib Storm,Roberto Zanetti,Harry Comber,Ahti Anttila,Joakim Dillner,Freddie Bray,Sabine Siesling,Eva Steliarova-Foucher +9 more
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Five ways to improve international comparisons of cancer survival: lessons learned from ICBP SURVMARK-2
Therese M.-L. Andersson,Tor Åge Myklebust,Mark J. Rutherford,Bjørn Møller,Melina Arnold,Isabelle Soerjomataram,Freddie Bray,Donald Maxwell Parkin,Paul C. Lambert +8 more
TL;DR: The International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) Survmark-2 study aims to compare survival in seven high-income countries across eight cancer sites and explore reasons for the observed differences as discussed by the authors .
Journal ArticleDOI
A novel method for identifying settings for well-motivated ecologic studies of cancer.
Andreas Stang,Bernd Kowall,Carsten Rusner,Britton Trabert,Freddie Bray,Joachim Schüz,Katherine A. McGlynn,Oliver Kuss +7 more
TL;DR: For cancers with high ICC for which systematic factors of the health care system, screening and diagnostic activities are not plausible explanations for between‐country variations in incidence, cross‐country sex‐specific ecologic studies may be especially promising.