J
Jeffrey A. Tice
Researcher at University of California, San Francisco
Publications - 134
Citations - 8707
Jeffrey A. Tice is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Mammography. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 120 publications receiving 7864 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey A. Tice include University of Hawaii & University of California.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Using the Coronary Artery Calcium Score to Predict Coronary Heart Disease Events A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
TL;DR: The coronary artery calcium score is an independent predictor of coronary heart disease events and differences among studies in outcome adjudication, measurement of other risk factors, tomographic slice thickness, and/or proportion of female study subjects may account for this heterogeneity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of serotesting with counselling on condom use and seroconversion among HIV discordant couples in Africa.
Susan Allen,Jeffrey A. Tice,P. Van de Perre,Serufilira A,Esther S. Hudes,Nsengumuremyi F,J. Bogaerts,Christina Lindan,Stephen B. Hulley +8 more
TL;DR: Confidential HIV serotesting with counselling caused a large increase in condom use and was associated with a lower rate of new HIV infections, suggesting HIV testing is a promising intervention for preventing the spread of HIV in African cities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Using clinical factors and mammographic breast density to estimate breast cancer risk: development and validation of a new predictive model.
Jeffrey A. Tice,Steven R. Cummings,Rebecca Smith-Bindman,Laura Ichikawa,William E. Barlow,Karla Kerlikowske +5 more
TL;DR: A breast cancer risk prediction model that incorporates a measure of breast density routinely reported with mammography was developed that had only modest ability to distinguish women who did not develop cancer from those who did, and it misclassified risk in some subgroups.
Journal ArticleDOI
Gastric banding or bypass? A systematic review comparing the two most popular bariatric procedures.
TL;DR: Weight loss outcomes strongly favored Roux-en-Y gastric bypass over laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding, and Gastric bypass should remain the primary bariatric procedure used to treat obesity in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prospective Breast Cancer Risk Prediction Model for Women Undergoing Screening Mammography
William E. Barlow,Emily White,Rachel Ballard-Barbash,Pamela M. Vacek,Linda Titus-Ernstoff,Patricia A. Carney,Jeffrey A. Tice,Diana S. M. Buist,Diana S. M. Buist,Berta M. Geller,Robert D. Rosenberg,Bonnie C. Yankaskas,Karla Kerlikowske +12 more
TL;DR: The model may identify high-risk women better than the Gail model, although predictive accuracy was only moderate and may be able to identify women at high risk for breast cancer for preventive interventions or more intensive surveillance.