K
Kristin Wallace
Researcher at Medical University of South Carolina
Publications - 68
Citations - 1946
Kristin Wallace is an academic researcher from Medical University of South Carolina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Risk factor. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 61 publications receiving 1682 citations. Previous affiliations of Kristin Wallace include Syracuse University & Dartmouth College.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The association of lifestyle and dietary factors with the risk for serrated polyps of the colorectum.
Kristin Wallace,Maria V. Grau,Dennis J. Ahnen,Dale C. Snover,Douglas J. Robertson,Daus Mahnke,Jiang Gui,Elizabeth L. Barry,Robert W. Summers,Gail McKeown-Eyssen,Robert W. Haile,John A. Baron +11 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that several common lifestyle and dietary variables are associated with risk for serrated polyps, and some of these may differ for the right and left colorectum.
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Selenium and Colorectal Adenoma: Results of a Pooled Analysis
Elizabeth T. Jacobs,Ruiyun Jiang,David S. Alberts,E. Robert Greenberg,Elaine W. Gunter,Margaret R. Karagas,Elaine Lanza,Luke D. Ratnasinghe,Mary E. Reid,Arthur Schatzkin,Stephanie A. Smith-Warner,Kristin Wallace,Maria Elena Martinez +12 more
TL;DR: The inverse association between higher blood selenium concentration and adenoma risk supports previous findings indicating that higher selenum status may be related to decreased risk of colorectal cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI
Global DNA Hypomethylation (LINE-1) in the Normal Colon and Lifestyle Characteristics and Dietary and Genetic Factors
Jane C. Figueiredo,Maria V. Grau,Kristin Wallace,A. Joan Levine,Lanlan Shen,Randala Hamdan,Xinli Chen,Robert S. Bresalier,Gail McKeown-Eyssen,Robert W. Haile,John A. Baron,Jean Pierre J. Issa +11 more
TL;DR: Race, dietary folic acid, and plasma B6 showed associations with global methylation that differed between the right and the left bowel, and no significant associations were found between LINE-1 methylation and folate treatment, age, sex, body mass index, smoking status, alcohol use, dietary intake, or circulating levels of B vitamins, homocysteine, or selected genotypes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio and overall survival in all sites of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
TL;DR: Current prognostic criteria are insufficient in predicting outcomes in head and neck cancer, necessitating new, readily available biomarkers, according to a new study.
Journal ArticleDOI
Association between folate levels and CpG Island hypermethylation in normal colorectal mucosa.
Kristin Wallace,Maria V. Grau,A. Joan Levine,Lanlan Shen,Randala Hamdan,Xinli Chen,Jiang Gui,Robert W. Haile,Elizabeth L. Barry,Dennis J. Ahnen,Gail McKeown-Eyssen,John A. Baron,Jean Pierre J. Issa +12 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that CGI methylation in normal colorectal mucosa is related to advancing age, race, rectal location, and RBC folate levels, which have important implications regarding the safety of supplementary folate administration in healthy adults.