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
Ethnicity and breast cancer in the Women's Health Initiative: A unifying concept for unfavorable outcome in African American women
Rowan T. Chlebowski,Zhao Chen,Thomas E. Rohan,Aaron K. Aragaki,Dorothy S. Lane,Nancy C. Dolan,Electra D. Paskett,Ruth E. Patterson,A. Hubbell,Ross L. Prentice +9 more
TL;DR: In African American a high proportion of unfavorable cancers associated most strongly with ethnicity plausible explains the increased breast cancer mortality seen, and breast cancer risk factors have similar influence across ethnicity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Low-Fat Diet and Cardiovascular Disease—Reply
Barbara V. Howard,Garnet L. Anderson,Bette J. Caan,Judith Hsia,Karen C. Johnson,Marian C. Limacher,JoAnn E. Manson,Ross L. Prentice,Marcia L. Stefanick,Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller,Linda Van Horn +10 more
Journal ArticleDOI
What If Americans Ate Less Fat
Liarme Sheppard,Ross L. Prentice +1 more
TL;DR: The authors may have substantially underestimated the reductions in mortality rates that may follow a reduction in fat intakes to 30% of energy by overlooking the effects of random error in serum cholesterol measurement, and especially in dietary fat measurement, in projecting corresponding CHD and cancer RR estimates.
Journal ArticleDOI
Four authors reply
Book ChapterDOI
1 Statistical Methods and Challenges in Epidemiology and Biomedical Research
TL;DR: The role and potential of biomarkers, including high-dimensional genomic and proteomic markers, have potential to add much knowledge about disease processes and to add specificity to intervention development and evaluation in biomedical research.