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Institution

New Generation University College

EducationAddis Ababa, Ethiopia
About: New Generation University College is a education organization based out in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 17440 authors who have published 28460 publications receiving 667288 citations. The organization is also known as: National University College.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although it is not as directly applicable to daily clinical practice, except in a few cases, laser Doppler flowmetry is a very useful technique in various kinds of dermatologic research.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the Ala variant of SOD2 is associated with moderately increased risk of prostate cancer, particularly among men with lower intakes of dietary and supplemental vitamin E.
Abstract: Superoxide dismutase (SOD) plays a key role in the detoxification of superoxide free radicals. We evaluated the association of prostate cancer with genetic polymorphisms in SOD1 (CuZn-SOD; IVS3-251A>G), SOD2 [MnSOD; Ex2+24T>C (V16A)], and SOD3 (EC-SOD; IVS1+186C>T, Ex3-631C>G, Ex3-516C>T, and Ex3-489C>T), the three main isoforms of SOD. Prostate cancer cases (n = 1,320) from the screening arm of the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial were frequency matched to nondiseased controls (n = 1,842) by age, race, time since initial screening, and year of blood draw. Conditional logistic regression was used to estimate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI); stratified analysis by the level of antioxidative vitamins was also conducted. The higher activity Ala variant at SOD2 Ex2+24T>C (V16A), which has been hypothesized to suppress prostate carcinogenesis, was associated with elevation of prostate cancer risk in Caucasians (Val/Ala versus Val/Val: OR, 1.17; 95% CI, 0.97-1.42; Ala/Ala versus Val/Val: OR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.03-1.60; P(trend) = 0.03). Stratification by quartiles of dietary and supplemental vitamin E intake (IU/d) showed risks of prostate cancer tended to be increased among SOD2 Ala allele carriers, except at the highest quartile of vitamin E intake (>222; P(interaction) = 0.06, Q1-Q3 versus Q4). The association between Ala allele and prostate cancer risk among those with lower intake of vitamin E (

149 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the risk of gastric cancer in members of HNPCC families in a gastriccancer endemic population, particularly in younger subjects and mutation carrier families, is high enough to justify careful screening.
Abstract: After endometrial cancer, gastric cancer is the second most common extracolonic cancer in cases of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC), where the relative risk in HNPCC familial members is known to be 4-fold. However, it is not yet clear whether HNPCC families from Korea, an endemic area for gastric cancer, have the same relative risk or whether the incidence of gastric cancer is high enough to justify familial screening. To clarify these questions, we investigated 1011 individuals from 66 Korean HNPCC families (28 families fulfilled the Amsterdam criteria and 38 did not). The overall and age-specific relative risk of gastric cancer in HNPCC families when compared with the background population was calculated. Twenty-five patients with gastric cancer were identified from among 22 HNPCC families. The calculated risk of gastric cancer in patients with HNPCC and their first-degree relatives was 2.1-fold greater than in the general population (95% confidence interval; range, 1.4-3.2). However, the relative risk of gastric cancer in the younger generations was much greater (11.3-fold in the 30s and 5.5-fold in the 40s). Additionally, the relative risk was greater in mutation carrier families than noncarrier families (3.2-fold versus 1.6-fold). This study demonstrates that the risk of gastric cancer in members of HNPCC families in a gastric cancer endemic population, particularly in younger subjects and mutation carrier families, is high enough to justify careful screening.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The development of TB disease in Koreans was associated with shorter GT repeats in intron II of the TLR2 gene, correlated with lower expression ofTLR2 through weaker promoter activity for genes with shorterGT repeats.
Abstract: The observation that Toll-like receptor (TLR)2-deficient mice are highly susceptible to mycobacteria suggests that mutations altering TLR2 expression may impair host response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We evaluated the association between guanine-thymine (GT) repeat polymorphism in intron II of the TLR2 gene and the presence of tuberculosis (TB) in Koreans. The numbers of GT repeats were determined by PCR and gene scans for 176 TB patients and 196 controls. The recombinant TLR2 promoter/exonI/exonII/intronII/luciferase constructs including three representative repeats: (GT)13, (GT)20, and (GT)24 were transfected into K562 cells, and luciferase activities were estimated and compared. The expression of TLR2 on CD14+ peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from healthy volunteers were measured with flow cytometry. Genotypes with shorter GT repeats were more common among TB patients (49.4 vs 37.7%, P=0.02). This observation was confirmed among 82 other TB patients as a validation cohort. Shorter GT repeats were associated with weaker promoter activities and lower TLR2 expression on CD14+ PBMCs. In conclusion, the development of TB disease in Koreans was associated with shorter GT repeats in intron II of the TLR2 gene. This association is correlated with lower expression of TLR2 through weaker promoter activity for genes with shorter GT repeats.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings suggest that breast cancer has a greater impact on employment among Korean women than among women in previously studied Western populations and that socio-cultural factors, as well as certain clinical characteristics, influence the decisions of Korean women to return or to not return to work after surviving breast cancer.
Abstract: We investigated the impacts of breast cancer diagnosis and treatment on employment status and the ability to perform occupational and housekeeping tasks. We performed a cross-sectional study to compare Korean breast cancer survivors (n = 1,594) who had been working before cancer diagnosis with a group of 20 to 60-year-old women from the general Korean population (n = 415). Employment decreased from 47.6% to 33.2% after cancer treatment. It was significantly smaller relative to the general population (52.1%) [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.68; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.35-2.11). There was an inverse association between employment and low levels of education, low household income, multiple comorbidities, disease stage, and mastectomy. In addition, women who lived with a spouse were more likely to quit working after treatment compared to women who had no spouse. Fatigue and exhaustion were the most frequent difficulties encountered during occupational work (by 46.8% of cancer survivors) and housework (64.6%). Our findings suggest that breast cancer has a greater impact on employment among Korean women than among women in previously studied Western populations. Our data suggest that socio-cultural factors, as well as certain clinical characteristics, influence the decisions of Korean women to return or to not return to work after surviving breast cancer.

148 citations


Authors

Showing all 17571 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Gregory Y.H. Lip1693159171742
Roberto Romero1511516108321
Paul D.P. Pharoah13079471338
Hyunyong Kim114143365154
Jung-Hyun Kim113119556181
Bertram L. Kasiske11047652219
Ki-Hyun Kim99191152157
Nosratola D. Vaziri9870834586
Tetsuo Nagano9649034267
Yung-Jue Bang9466446313
Young-Ho Khang94262119219
Jae Y. Ro9374734462
Neal D. Ryan9131635163
John Kim9040641986
Dong Wan Kim8983349632
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202316
2022153
20212,324
20202,070
20191,938
20181,729