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Stephanie A. Rosse

Researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

Publications -  10
Citations -  878

Stephanie A. Rosse is an academic researcher from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome-wide association study & Colorectal cancer. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications receiving 770 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephanie A. Rosse include Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute & University of Washington.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of Genetic Susceptibility Loci for Colorectal Tumors in a Genome-Wide Meta-analysis

Ulrike Peters, +83 more
- 01 Apr 2013 - 
TL;DR: In a large genome-wide association study, polymorphisms close to nucleic acid binding protein 1 (which encodes a DNA-binding protein involved in DNA repair) with colorectal tumor risk and polymorphisms in laminin gamma 1, cyclin D2, and T-box 3 are associated.
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Association of aspirin and NSAID use with risk of colorectal cancer according to genetic variants.

Hongmei Nan, +58 more
- 17 Mar 2015 - 
TL;DR: In this genome-wide investigation of gene × environment interactions, use of aspirin and/or NSAIDs was associated with lower risk of colorectal cancer, and this association differed according to genetic variation at 2 SNPs at chromosomes 12 and 15.
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Genome-wide association study of colorectal cancer identifies six new susceptibility loci

Fredrick R. Schumacher, +103 more
TL;DR: Six new susceptibility loci reaching a genome-wide threshold of P<5.0E-08 are described, providing additional insight into the underlying biological mechanisms of colorectal cancer and demonstrating the scientific value of large consortia-based genetic epidemiology studies.
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Genome-Wide Diet-Gene Interaction Analyses for Risk of Colorectal Cancer

TL;DR: The results identify a novel gene-diet interaction with processed meat for colorectal cancer, highlighting that diet may modify the effect of genetic variants on disease risk, which may have important implications for prevention.
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Fine Mapping and Identification of BMI Loci in African Americans

TL;DR: Fine mapping in AAs is a powerful approach for both narrowing in on the underlying causal variants in known loci and discovering BMI-related loci.