scispace - formally typeset
R

Ross L. Prentice

Researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

Publications -  407
Citations -  37908

Ross L. Prentice is an academic researcher from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Women's Health Initiative. The author has an hindex of 94, co-authored 407 publications receiving 33619 citations. Previous affiliations of Ross L. Prentice include Argonne National Laboratory & Radiation Effects Research Foundation.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-Species Antibody Microarray Interrogation Identifies a 3-Protein Panel of Plasma Biomarkers for Early Diagnosis of Pancreas Cancer

TL;DR: Potential disease detection markers in plasma up to 4 years before death from PDA with superior performance to CA19-9 are identified and might be especially useful in high-risk cohorts to diagnose early, resectable disease, particularly in patients that do not produce CA 19-9.
Journal ArticleDOI

Serial blood pressure measurements and cardiovascular disease in a japanese cohort

TL;DR: A cohort of 16,711 residents of Hiroshima and Nagasaki have participated in a program of biennial clinical examination and history taking that began in 1958, and SBP levels several years in the past are more closely associated with coronary heart disease risk than are recent SBP readings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Circulating Folate, Vitamin B6, and Methionine in Relation to Lung Cancer Risk in the Lung Cancer Cohort Consortium (LC3)

Anouar Fanidi, +58 more
TL;DR: Although confounding by tobacco exposure or reverse causation cannot be ruled out, these study results are compatible with a small decrease in lung cancer risk in ever smokers who avoid low concentrations of circulating folate and vitamin B6.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is high vitamin B12 status a cause of lung cancer

Anouar Fanidi, +68 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that high vitamin B12 status increases the risk of lung cancer is supported, via direct measurements of pre‐diagnostic circulating vitamin B 12 concentrations in a nested case–control study and a Mendelian randomization approach in an independent case-control sample.