Institution
Cancer Epidemiology Unit
About: Cancer Epidemiology Unit is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 669 authors who have published 1725 publications receiving 93979 citations.
Topics: Population, Cancer, Breast cancer, European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition, Prospective cohort study
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The data confirm lenvatinib efficacy in patients with advanced thyroid cancer, despite an important toxic profile, and transient drug interruption and dose reduction were required in 10 and 9 cases, respectively.
Abstract: Background We retrospectively analyzed the efficacy and safety of lenvatinib in 12 patients with advanced radioiodine-refractory thyroid cancer in the setting of daily clinical practice. Patients and methods The starting daily dose of lenvatinib was 24 mg, tapered in the case of adverse events. Disease status was periodically evaluated by a single radiologist and safety assessment was regularly performed. Results After a median follow-up of 13.3 months, 6- and 12-month progression-free survival rates were 63.6% and 54.6%, respectively. Overall survival at 6 and 12 months was 83.3% and 75.0%. Partial response was observed in five patients, while two showed stable disease as their best response. Conversely, progressive disease at first radiological assessment was detected in four patients. All patients experienced at least one adverse event, including systemic and gastrointestinal toxicity, high blood pressure and hand-foot syndrome. In order to manage toxicity, transient drug interruption and dose reduction were required in 10 and 9 cases, respectively. Conclusion Our data confirm lenvatinib efficacy in patients with advanced thyroid cancer, despite an important toxic profile.
28 citations
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French Institute of Health and Medical Research1, University of Melbourne2, Cancer Council Victoria3, German Cancer Research Center4, Aarhus University5, University of Granada6, University of Cambridge7, Cancer Epidemiology Unit8, Academy of Athens9, Harvard University10, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens11, Prevention Institute12, Imperial College London13, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences14, Lund University15, University of Gothenburg16, Umeå University17, Karolinska Institutet18, International Agency for Research on Cancer19, Odense University Hospital20
TL;DR: Investigation of variants at ABO and FUT1–7 loci and GC risk in a case–control study of 365 cases and 1,284 controls nested within the EPIC cohort indicated that the associations were largely due to allelic blood group A.
Abstract: ABO blood serotype A is known to be associated with risk of gastric cancer (GC), but little is known how ABO alleles and the fucosyltransferase (FUT) enzymes and genes which are involved in Lewis antigen formation [and in Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) binding and pathogenicity] may be related to GC risk in a European population. The authors conducted an investigation of 32 variants at ABO and FUT1-7 loci and GC risk in a case-control study of 365 cases and 1,284 controls nested within the EPIC cohort (the EPIC-Eurgast study). Four variants (including rs505922) in ABO, and allelic blood group A (AO+AA, odds ratio=1.84, 95%CI=1.20-2.80) were associated with diffuse-type GC; however, conditional models with other ABO variants indicated that the associations were largely due to allelic blood group A. One variant in FUT5 was also associated with diffuse-type GC, and four variants (and haplotypes) in FUT2 (Se), FUT3 (Le) and FUT6 with intestinal-type GC. Further, one variant in ABO, two in FUT3 and two in FUT6 were associated with H. pylori infection status in controls, and two of these (in FUT3 and FUT6) were weakly associated with intestinal-type GC risk. None of the individual variants surpassed a Bonferroni corrected p-value cutoff of 0.0016; however, after a gene-based permutation test, two loci [FUT3(Le)/FUT5/FUT6 and FUT2(Se)] were significantly associated with diffuse- and intestinal-type GC, respectively. Replication and functional studies are therefore recommended to clarify the role of ABO and FUT alleles in H. pylori infection and subtype-specific gastric carcinogenesis.
28 citations
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TL;DR: At both univariate and multivariate analysis heavy cigarette smoking and alcohol drinking were associated with poor survival in patients diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
28 citations
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TL;DR: Hodgkin's disease mortality rates steadily declined by about 75% between the late 1960's and the late 1990's in the current European Union countries and the USA, and Japan, but Eastern European countries showed only a approximately 40% decline, and no further fall thereafter.
Abstract: Hodgkin's disease mortality rates steadily declined by about 75% between the late 1960's and the late 1990's in the current European Union countries and the USA, and Japan. Eastern European countries, however, showed only an approximately 40% decline between the late 1960's and the early 1990's, and no further fall thereafter.
28 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that prenatal maternal characteristics, especially maternal smoking, pre-pregnancy overweight and underweight, parity and gestational hypertension, are associated with different aspects of infant weight growth, which may offer insights into the mechanisms governing infant growth.
Abstract: Background
Studying prenatal influences of early life growth is relevant to life-course epidemiology as some of its features have been linked to the onset of later diseases.
Methods
We studied the association between prenatal maternal characteristics (height, age, parity, education, pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), smoking, gestational diabetes and hypertension) and offspring weight trajectories in infancy using SuperImposition by Translation And Rotation (SITAR) models, which parameterize growth in terms of three biologically interpretable parameters: size, velocity and tempo. We used data from three contemporary cohorts based in Portugal (GXXI, n = 738), Italy (NINFEA, n = 2,925), and Chile (GOCS, n = 959).
Results
Estimates were generally consistent across the cohorts for maternal height, age, parity and pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity. Some exposures only affected one growth parameter (e.g. maternal height (per cm): 0.4% increase in size (95% confidence interval (CI):0.3; 0.5)), others were either found to affect size and velocity (e.g. pre-pregnancy underweight vs normal weight: smaller size (−4.9%, 95% CI:−6.5; −3.3), greater velocity (5.9%, 95% CI:1.9;10.0)), or to additionally influence tempo (e.g. pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity vs normal weight: increased size (7.9%, 95% CI:4.9;10.8), delayed tempo (0.26 months, 95% CI:0.11;0.41), decreased velocity (−4.9%, 95% CI: −10.8;0.9)).
Conclusions
By disentangling the growth parameters of size, velocity and tempo, we found that prenatal maternal characteristics, especially maternal smoking, pre-pregnancy overweight and underweight, parity and gestational hypertension, are associated with different aspects of infant weight growth. These results may offer insights into the mechanisms governing infant growth.
28 citations
Authors
Showing all 669 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Richard Peto | 183 | 683 | 231434 |
Kay-Tee Khaw | 174 | 1389 | 138782 |
Silvia Franceschi | 155 | 1340 | 112504 |
Timothy J. Key | 146 | 808 | 90810 |
Hans-Olov Adami | 145 | 908 | 83473 |
Alicja Wolk | 135 | 778 | 66239 |
Paolo Vineis | 134 | 1088 | 86608 |
Lars Klareskog | 131 | 697 | 63281 |
Eva Negri | 129 | 1010 | 66735 |
John A. Baron | 128 | 609 | 61182 |
Jack Cuzick | 128 | 754 | 79979 |
Anders Ekbom | 116 | 613 | 51430 |
C. La Vecchia | 115 | 817 | 53460 |
Valerie Beral | 114 | 471 | 53729 |
Carlo La Vecchia | 112 | 1265 | 56282 |