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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.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The husbands of the women in the MT group were significantly more depressed after 4 months and reported complaints related to their wive's disease more often than did those in the BCT group, which is similar to levels seen among breast cancer-operated women themselves.

61 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Aggregate results from studies with prospectively reported information show that the incidence of breast cancer is similar in women who did and did not report passive exposure to tobacco smoke either as a child or as an adult.
Abstract: Background Active smoking has little or no effect on women's risk of developing breast cancer, but it has been suggested that passive exposure to tobacco smoke may increase this risk among women who have never smoked. Objective To evaluate the possible relationship between passive smoking and breast cancer risk within the Million Women Study, a large UK prospective study, and to report a meta-analysis of published results. Methods In the large prospective study, 224 917 never smokers who completed a questionnaire that asked women whether their parents had smoked and if their current partner smoked were followed up for an average of 3.5 years for incident breast cancer. In the meta-analysis, studies that had recorded exposure information prospectively and retrospectively were considered separately. Main outcome measures Adjusted relative risk of breast cancer in never smokers who were passively exposed to tobacco smoke at various ages compared with never smokers with no such exposure. Results In the prospective study, 2518 incident invasive breast cancers occurred during follow-up and the adjusted relative risk of breast cancer for passive exposure either as a child or as an adult vs neither exposure was 0.98 (95% CI 0.88-1.09); results were similarly null for childhood exposure (0.98, 0.88-1.08) and adult exposure (1.02, 0.89-1.16) separately. We identified seven other studies with prospectively recorded exposure data; when results of all eight studies were combined (including 5743 never smokers with breast cancer), the aggregate relative risk was 0.99 (0.93-1.05) for any passive exposure. The aggregate findings differed substantially (P = 0.0002) between these 8 studies and 17 other studies with retrospectively recorded information (including 5696 never smokers with breast cancer). Conclusions Aggregate results from studies with prospectively reported information show that the incidence of breast cancer is similar in women who did and did not report passive exposure to tobacco smoke either as a child or as an adult. The aggregate findings from the retrospective studies may have been distorted by some women becoming more likely to report past exposures because they knew that they had breast cancer.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Eve Roman1, Pat Doyle, Pat Ansell, Diana Bull, Valerie Beral 
TL;DR: The postal methods developed for obtaining information about reproductive events and child health proved to be reliable in men, as well as in women, and the findings for medical radiographers are reassuring.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To develop a reliable method for collecting information on reproductive outcome in an occupational setting; and to investigate the health of children born to medical radiographers. METHODS: The study population comprised 6730 members of the College of Radiographers who were, at the time of survey; aged between 30 and 64 years, on the current membership file of the College, and were resident in Britain. RESULTS: The postal method developed proved to be reliable, with around 87% of questionnaires being returned. The observed frequencies of reproductive events were broadly in line with findings from other studies: of the 9208 pregnancies reported, 83% were livebirths, 12% were miscarriages (gestational age or = 20 weeks), and 1% were other rarer spontaneous adverse events (ectopic pregnancy, blighted ovum, and hydatidiform mole). There was little difference between men and women in the frequency of adverse reproductive events reported, with the exception that male radiographers reported fewer medical terminations, the proportions being 3.1% and 1.4% for women and men respectively. Among children, the overall risks of major congenital malformation (RR 1.0, 95%CI 0.9-1.2), chromosomal anomaly (RR 1.4, 95%CI 0.8-2.3), and cancer (RR 1.2 95%CI 0.7-2.0) were as expected based on general population rates. Borderline excesses of chromosomal anomalies other than Down's syndrome in the children of female radiographers (RR 3.9, 95%CI 1.3-9.0, based on five observations), and cancer in the children of male radiographers (RR 2.7, 95%CI 0.9-6.5, based on five observations) were noted. The numbers on which these risks are based are small and the findings should be interpreted cautiously. CONCLUSIONS: The postal methods developed for obtaining information about reproductive events and child health proved to be reliable in men, as well as in women. Overall, the findings for medical radiographers are reassuring. Dose-response relations could not, however, be examined as long term dose records of radiographers are not routinely kept in an accessible form.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A total of 3,559 boys were examined for cryptorchidism over a 2-year period and found that 5.9 % had one or both testes undescended and at 3 months of age 1.61 % still had an undescending testes.
Abstract: A total of 3,559 boys were examined for cryptorchidism over a 2-year period. At birth, 5.9 % (210/3,534) had one or both testes undescended and at 3 months of age 1.61 % (57/3,534) still had an undesc

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported that the reported increasing thyroid cancer survival trend and differences by area are mainly explained by the varying histological case-mix of cases, while survival rates were similar across areas and periods.

60 citations


Authors

Showing all 669 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard Peto183683231434
Kay-Tee Khaw1741389138782
Silvia Franceschi1551340112504
Timothy J. Key14680890810
Hans-Olov Adami14590883473
Alicja Wolk13577866239
Paolo Vineis134108886608
Lars Klareskog13169763281
Eva Negri129101066735
John A. Baron12860961182
Jack Cuzick12875479979
Anders Ekbom11661351430
C. La Vecchia11581753460
Valerie Beral11447153729
Carlo La Vecchia112126556282
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2021174
2020131
2019130
201890
201784
201678