S
Sharayu Mhatre
Researcher at Homi Bhabha National Institute
Publications - 18
Citations - 286
Sharayu Mhatre is an academic researcher from Homi Bhabha National Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Odds ratio & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 14 publications receiving 184 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Common genetic variation and risk of gallbladder cancer in India: a case-control genome-wide association study
Sharayu Mhatre,Zhaoming Wang,Rajini Nagrani,Rajendra A. Badwe,Shubhada V. Chiplunkar,Balraj Mittal,Saurabh Yadav,Haoyu Zhang,Charles C. Chung,Charles C. Chung,Prachi Patil,Stephen J. Chanock,Rajesh Dikshit,Nilanjan Chatterjee,Preetha Rajaraman +14 more
TL;DR: This study is the first report of common genetic variation conferring gallbladder cancer risk at genome-wide significance and underlines the likely importance of these hepatobiliary phospholipid transporter genes in the pathology of gallbladders cancer.
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Central obesity increases risk of breast cancer irrespective of menopausal and hormonal receptor status in women of South Asian Ethnicity
Rajini Nagrani,Sharayu Mhatre,Preetha Rajaraman,Isabelle Soerjomataram,Paolo Boffetta,Sudeep Gupta,Vani Parmar,RA Badwe,Rajesh Dikshit +8 more
TL;DR: Central obesity appears to be a key risk factor for BC irrespective of menopausal or HR status in Indian women with no history of hormone replacement therapy.
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Rural urban differences in breast cancer in India
TL;DR: Living first 20 years of life in a rural area reduces the risk of breast cancer and demonstrates that lifestyle operative in a Rural area is protective against risk of developing breast cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI
Place of birth and risk of gallbladder cancer in India.
Sharayu Mhatre,Rajini Nagrani,Atul Budukh,Shubhada V. Chiplunkar,RA Badwe,Prachi Patil,Mathieu Laversanne,Preetha Rajaraman,Freddie Bray,Rajesh Dikshit +9 more
TL;DR: The present study signifies the importance of place of birth, length of stay, and effect of migration from high- to low-risk region in the development of GBC, and indicates role of environmental and genetic factors in etiology of disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Understanding rural-urban differences in risk factors for breast cancer in an Indian population.
Rajini Nagrani,Sharayu Mhatre,Paolo Boffetta,Preetha Rajaraman,Rajendra A. Badwe,Sudeep Gupta,Isabelle Romieu,Vani Parmar,Rajesh Dikshit +8 more
TL;DR: Differences in the prevalence of central adiposity and age at first full-term pregnancy between rural and urban women from India may explain some differences in breast cancer rates between these two populations.