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Luigi Grassi

Researcher at University of Ferrara

Publications -  346
Citations -  14290

Luigi Grassi is an academic researcher from University of Ferrara. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychosocial & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 315 publications receiving 11468 citations. Previous affiliations of Luigi Grassi include Sapienza University of Rome & University of Cambridge.

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Prevalence of depression, anxiety, and adjustment disorder in oncological, haematological, and palliative-care settings: a meta-analysis of 94 interview-based studies

TL;DR: Interview-defined depression and anxiety is less common in patients with cancer than previously thought, although some combination of mood disorders occurs in 30-40% of patients in hospital settings without a significant difference between palliative-care and non-palliatives-care settings.
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The Allelic Landscape of Human Blood Cell Trait Variation and Links to Common Complex Disease

William J. Astle, +103 more
- 17 Nov 2016 - 
TL;DR: A genome-wide association analysis in the UK Biobank and INTERVAL studies is performed, providing evidence of shared genetic pathways linking blood cell indices with complex pathologies, including autoimmune diseases, schizophrenia, and coronary heart disease and evidence suggesting previously reported population associations betweenBlood cell indices and cardiovascular disease may be non-causal.
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The expanding role of primary care in cancer control

TL;DR: This Commission considers how this expanding role for primary care can work for cancer control, which has long been dominated by highly technical interventions centred on treatment, and in which the contribution of primary care has been largely perceived as marginal.
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Depression in HIV Infected Patients: a Review

TL;DR: The epidemiology and the main clinical features of depression in HIV-infected patients, the causal pathways linking depression and HIV infection, the validity of screening tools, and the efficacy of different treatment approaches are discussed.