N
Norie Sawada
Researcher at Imperial College London
Publications - 30
Citations - 699
Norie Sawada is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prospective cohort study & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 30 publications receiving 491 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Association of green tea consumption with mortality due to all causes and major causes of death in a Japanese population: the Japan Public Health Center-based Prospective Study (JPHC Study)
Eiko Saito,Manami Inoue,Norie Sawada,Taichi Shimazu,Taiki Yamaji,Motoki Iwasaki,Shizuka Sasazuki,Mitsuhiko Noda,Hiroyasu Iso,Shoichiro Tsugane,S. Tsugane,Norie Sawada,M. Iwasaki,S. Sasazuki,Taiki Yamaji,T. Shimazu,T. Hanaoka,J. Ogata,S. Baba,Toshifumi Mannami,A. Okayama,Yoshihiro Kokubo,K. Miyakawa,F. Saito,A. Koizumi,Y. Sano,I. Hashimoto,T. Ikuta,Y. Tanaba,H. Sato,Y. Roppongi,T. Takashima,Y. Miyajima,N. Suzuki,S. Nagasawa,Y. Furusugi,N. Nagai,Y. Ito,S. Komatsu,T. Minamizono,H. Sanada,Y. Hatayama,F. Kobayashi,H. Uchino,Y. Shirai,T. Kondo,R. Sasaki,Y. Watanabe,Yukiaki Miyagawa,Y. Kobayashi,M. Machida,K. Kobayashi,M. Tsukada,Y. Kishimoto,E. Takara,T. Fukuyama,M. Kinjo,M. Irei,Hiroshi Sakiyama,K. Imoto,H. Yazawa,T. Seo,A. Seiko,F. Ito,F. Shoji,R. Saito,A. Murata,Kouji Minato,K. Motegi,Takashi Fujieda,S. Yamato,K. Matsui,T. Abe,M. Katagiri,M. Suzuki,M. Doi,A. Terao,Y. Ishikawa,T. Tagami,H. Sueta,H. Doi,M. Urata,N. Okamoto,F. Ide,H. Goto,N. Onga,H. Takaesu,M. Uehara,T. Nakasone,M. Yamakawa,F. Horii,I. Asano,H. Yamaguchi,K. Aoki,S. Maruyama,M. Ichii,M. Takano,Y. Tsubono,K. Suzuki,Y. Honda,Kazumasa Yamagishi,S. Sakurai,N. Tsuchiya,M. Kabuto,M. Yamaguchi,Y. Matsumura,S. Sasaki,S. Watanabe,M. Akabane,Takashi Kadowaki,M. Inoue,M. Noda,Tetsuya Mizoue,Y. Kawaguchi,Yasuhiro Takashima,Y. Yoshida,K. Nakamura,Ribeka Takachi,Junko Ishihara,S. Matsushima,S. Natsukawa,H. Shimizu,H. Sugimura,S. Tominaga,Nobuyuki Hamajima,H. Iso,Tomotaka Sobue,Minoru Iida,W. Ajiki,A. Ioka,S. Sato,E. Maruyama,Masamitsu Konishi,K. Okada,Isao Saito,Nobufumi Yasuda,S. Kono,S. Akiba +137 more
TL;DR: The consumption of green tea may reduce the risk of all-cause mortality and the three leading causes of death in Japan, according to a large-scale population-based cohort study.
Journal ArticleDOI
Genetic polymorphisms of ADH1B, ADH1C and ALDH2, alcohol consumption, and the risk of gastric cancer: the Japan Public Health Center-based prospective study
Akihisa Hidaka,Shizuka Sasazuki,Keitaro Matsuo,Hidemi Ito,Norie Sawada,Taichi Shimazu,Taiki Yamaji,Motoki Iwasaki,Manami Inoue,Shoichiro Tsugane +9 more
TL;DR: No association was observed between alcohol consumption, ADH1B (rs1229984), ADh1C (rs698) and ALDH2 (rs671) polymorphisms and gastric cancer risk, however, considering gene-environmental interaction,ADH1C G allele carriers who drink ≥150 g/week of ethanol had a 2.5-fold increased risk of gastric cancers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Coping strategies and risk of cardiovascular disease incidence and mortality: the Japan Public Health Center-based prospective Study
Thomas Svensson,Thomas Svensson,Manami Inoue,Norie Sawada,Kazumasa Yamagishi,Hadrien Charvat,Isao Saito,Yoshihiro Kokubo,Hiroyasu Iso,Noriyuki Kawamura,Kenji Shibuya,Masaru Mimura,Shoichiro Tsugane +12 more
TL;DR: An approach-oriented coping strategy, i.e. proactively dealing with sources of stress, may be associated with significantly reduced stroke incidence and CVD mortality in a Japanese population-based cohort.
Journal ArticleDOI
The association between midlife serum high-density lipoprotein and mild cognitive impairment and dementia after 19 years of follow-up
TL;DR: It is found that high midlife HDL-C levels are inversely associated with both late-life MCI and dementia in a Japanese population.
Journal ArticleDOI
High hemoglobin A1c levels within the non‐diabetic range are associated with the risk of all cancers
Atsushi Goto,Mitsuhiko Noda,Norie Sawada,Masayuki Kato,Akihisa Hidaka,Tetsuya Mizoue,Taichi Shimazu,Taiki Yamaji,Motoki Iwasaki,Shizuka Sasazuki,Manami Inoue,Takashi Kadowaki,Shoichiro Tsugane +12 more
TL;DR: The findings corroborate the notion that glycemic control in individuals with high HbA1c levels may be important not only to prevent diabetes but also to prevent cancer.