304 results on '"Eluf-Neto, J."'
Search Results
2. Alcohol and tobacco, and the risk of cancers of the upper aerodigestive tract in Latin America: a case-control study
- Author
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Szymańska, K., Hung, R. J., Wünsch-Filho, V., Eluf-Neto, J., Curado, M. P., Koifman, S., Matos, E., Menezes, A., Fernandez, L., Daudt, A. W., Boffetta, P., and Brennan, P.
- Published
- 2011
3. Drinking of maté and the risk of cancers of the upper aerodigestive tract in Latin America: a case—control study
- Author
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Szymańska, K., Matos, E., Hung, R. J., Wünsch-Filho, V., Eluf-Neto, J., Menezes, A., Daudt, A. W., Brennan, P., and Boffetta, P.
- Published
- 2010
4. Incidence of stroke subtypes, prognosis and prevalence of risk factors in Joinville, Brazil: a 2 year community based study
- Author
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Cabral, N.L., Goncalves, A.R.R., Longo, A.L., Moro, C.H.C., Costa, G., Amaral, C.H., Fonseca, L.A.M., and Eluf-Neto, J.
- Subjects
Stroke (Disease) -- Distribution ,Stroke (Disease) -- Risk factors ,Stroke (Disease) -- Research ,Cancer patients -- Prognosis ,Cancer patients -- Research ,Company distribution practices ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2009
5. Trends in stroke incidence, mortality and case fatality rates in Joinville, Brazil: 1995-2006
- Author
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Cabral, N.L., Goncalves, A.R.R., Longo, A.L., Moro, C.H.C., Costa, G., Amaral, C.H., Souza, M.V., Eluf-Neto, J., Augusto, L., and Fonseca, M.
- Subjects
Stroke (Disease) -- Distribution ,Stroke (Disease) -- Patient outcomes ,Stroke (Disease) -- Research ,Mortality -- Brazil ,Mortality -- Statistics ,Mortality -- Demographic aspects ,Mortality -- Research ,Company distribution practices ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2009
6. Adherence to nutritional interventions in head and neck cancer patients: a systematic scoping review of the literature
- Author
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de Oliveira Faria, S., primary, Alvim Moravia, R., additional, Howell, D., additional, and Eluf Neto, J., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Prevalence of GB Virus C (Hepatitis G Virus) and Risk Factors for Infection in São Paulo, Brazil
- Author
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Ribeiro-dos-Santos, G., Nishiya, A., Nascimento, C., Bassit, L., Chamone, D., Focaccia, R., Eluf-Neto, J., and Sabino, E.
- Published
- 2002
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- View/download PDF
8. How much do smoking and alcohol consumption explain socioeconomic inequalities in head and neck cancer risk?
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Boing, A F, Antunes, J L Ferreira, de Carvalho, M Brasilino, de Góis Filho, J Francisco, Kowalski, L P, Michaluart, P, Jr, Eluf-Neto, J, Boffetta, P, and Wünsch-Filho, V
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- 2011
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- View/download PDF
9. Survival and prognostic factors of patients with breast cancer in the state of São Paulo
- Author
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Almeida, R J, primary, Luizaga, C T M, additional, Eluf-Neto, J, additional, Pessoa, E C, additional, Chiarotti, A M M, additional, Souza, R A, additional, and Murta-Nascimento, C, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. TP53 and EGFR mutations in combination with lifestyle risk factors in tumours of the upper aerodigestive tract from South America
- Author
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Szymańska, K., Levi, J.E., Menezes, A., Wünsch-Filho, V., Eluf-Neto, J., Koifman, S., Matos, E., Daudt, A.W., Curado, M.P., Villar, S., Pawlita, M., Waterboer, T., Boffetta, P., Hainaut, P., and Brennan, P.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Mendelian Randomization and mediation analysis of leukocyte telomere length and risk of lung and head and neck cancers
- Author
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Kachuri, L. Saarela, O. Bojesen, S.E. Davey Smith, G. Liu, G. Landi, M.T. Caporaso, N.E. Christiani, D.C. Johansson, M. Panico, S. Overvad, K. Trichopoulou, A. Vineis, P. Scelo, G. Zaridze, D. Wu, X. Albanes, D. Diergaarde, B. Lagiou, P. Macfarlane, G.J. Aldrich, M.C. Tardón, A. Rennert, G. Olshan, A.F. Weissler, M.C. Chen, C. Goodman, G.E. Doherty, J.A. Ness, A.R. Bickeböller, H. Wichmann, H.-E. Risch, A. Field, J.K. Teare, M.D. Kiemeney, L.A. Van Der Heijden, E.H.F.M. Carroll, J.C. Haugen, A. Zienolddiny, S. Skaug, V. Wünsch-Filho, V. Tajara, E.H. Ayoub Moysés, R. Daumas Nunes, F. Lam, S. Eluf-Neto, J. Lacko, M. Peters, W.H.M. Le Marchand, L. Duell, E.J. Andrew, A.S. Franceschi, S. Schabath, M.B. Manjer, J. Arnold, S. Lazarus, P. Mukeriya, A. Swiatkowska, B. Janout, V. Holcatova, I. Stojsic, J. Mates, D. Lissowska, J. Boccia, S. Lesseur, C. Zong, X. McKay, J.D. Brennan, P. Amos, C.I. Hung, R.J.
- Abstract
Background: Evidence from observational studies of telomere length (TL) has been conflicting regarding its direction of association with cancer risk. We investigated the causal relevance of TL for lung and head and neck cancers using Mendelian Randomization (MR) and mediation analyses. Methods: We developed a novel genetic instrument for TL in chromosome 5p15.33, using variants identified through deep-sequencing, that were genotyped in 2051 cancer-free subjects. Next, we conducted an MR analysis of lung (16 396 cases, 13 013 controls) and head and neck cancer (4415 cases, 5013 controls) using eight genetic instruments for TL. Lastly, the 5p15.33 instrument and distinct 5p15.33 lung cancer risk loci were evaluated using two-sample mediation analysis, to quantify their direct and indirect, telomere-mediated, effects. Results: The multi-allelic 5p15.33 instrument explained 1.49-2.00% of TL variation in our data (p = 2.6 × 10-9). The MR analysis estimated that a 1000 base-pair increase in TL increases risk of lung cancer [odds ratio (OR) = 1.41, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.20-1.65] and lung adenocarcinoma (OR = 1.92, 95% CI: 1.51-2.22), but not squamous lung carcinoma (OR = 1.04, 95% CI: 0.83-1.29) or head and neck cancers (OR = 0.90, 95% CI: 0.70-1.05). Mediation analysis of the 5p15.33 instrument indicated an absence of direct effects on lung cancer risk (OR = 1.00, 95% CI: 0.95-1.04). Analysis of distinct 5p15.33 susceptibility variants estimated that TL mediates up to 40% of the observed associations with lung cancer risk. Conclusions: Our findings support a causal role for long telomeres in lung cancer aetiology, particularly for adenocarcinoma, and demonstrate that telomere maintenance partially mediates the lung cancer susceptibility conferred by 5p15.33 loci. © 2018 The Author(s) 2018; all rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.
- Published
- 2019
12. Mendelian Randomization and mediation analysis of leukocyte telomere length and risk of lung and head and neck cancers
- Author
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Kachuri, L., Saarela, O., Bojesen, S.E., Smith, G., Liu, G., Landi, M.T., Caporaso, N.E., Christiani, D.C., Johansson, M., Panico, S., Overvad, K., Trichopoulou, A., Vineis, P., Scelo, G., Zaridze, D., Wu, X., Albanes, D., Diergaarde, B., Lagiou, P., Macfarlane, G.J., Aldrich, M.C., Tardon, A., Rennert, G., Olshan, A.F., Weissler, M.C., Chen, C, Goodman, G.E., Doherty, J.A., Ness, A.R., Bickeboller, H., Wichmann, H.E., Risch, A., Field, J.K., Teare, M.D., Kiemeney, L.A.L.M., Heijden, E. van der, Carroll, J.C., Haugen, A., Zienolddiny, S., Skaug, V., Wunsch-Filho, V., Tajara, E.H., Moyses, R. Ayoub, Nunes, F. Daumas, Lam, S., Eluf-Neto, J., Lacko, M., Peters, W.H.M., Marchand, L. Le, Duell, E.J., Andrew, A.S., Franceschi, S., Schabath, M.B., Manjer, J., Arnold, S, Lazarus, P., Mukeriya, A., Swiatkowska, B., Janout, V., Holcatova, I., Stojsic, J., Mates, D., Lissowska, J., Boccia, S., Lesseur, C., Zong, X., McKay, J.D., Brennan, P., Amos, C.I., Hung, R.J., Kachuri, L., Saarela, O., Bojesen, S.E., Smith, G., Liu, G., Landi, M.T., Caporaso, N.E., Christiani, D.C., Johansson, M., Panico, S., Overvad, K., Trichopoulou, A., Vineis, P., Scelo, G., Zaridze, D., Wu, X., Albanes, D., Diergaarde, B., Lagiou, P., Macfarlane, G.J., Aldrich, M.C., Tardon, A., Rennert, G., Olshan, A.F., Weissler, M.C., Chen, C, Goodman, G.E., Doherty, J.A., Ness, A.R., Bickeboller, H., Wichmann, H.E., Risch, A., Field, J.K., Teare, M.D., Kiemeney, L.A.L.M., Heijden, E. van der, Carroll, J.C., Haugen, A., Zienolddiny, S., Skaug, V., Wunsch-Filho, V., Tajara, E.H., Moyses, R. Ayoub, Nunes, F. Daumas, Lam, S., Eluf-Neto, J., Lacko, M., Peters, W.H.M., Marchand, L. Le, Duell, E.J., Andrew, A.S., Franceschi, S., Schabath, M.B., Manjer, J., Arnold, S, Lazarus, P., Mukeriya, A., Swiatkowska, B., Janout, V., Holcatova, I., Stojsic, J., Mates, D., Lissowska, J., Boccia, S., Lesseur, C., Zong, X., McKay, J.D., Brennan, P., Amos, C.I., and Hung, R.J.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 208363.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access), BACKGROUND: Evidence from observational studies of telomere length (TL) has been conflicting regarding its direction of association with cancer risk. We investigated the causal relevance of TL for lung and head and neck cancers using Mendelian Randomization (MR) and mediation analyses. METHODS: We developed a novel genetic instrument for TL in chromosome 5p15.33, using variants identified through deep-sequencing, that were genotyped in 2051 cancer-free subjects. Next, we conducted an MR analysis of lung (16 396 cases, 13 013 controls) and head and neck cancer (4415 cases, 5013 controls) using eight genetic instruments for TL. Lastly, the 5p15.33 instrument and distinct 5p15.33 lung cancer risk loci were evaluated using two-sample mediation analysis, to quantify their direct and indirect, telomere-mediated, effects. RESULTS: The multi-allelic 5p15.33 instrument explained 1.49-2.00% of TL variation in our data (p = 2.6 x 10-9). The MR analysis estimated that a 1000 base-pair increase in TL increases risk of lung cancer [odds ratio (OR) = 1.41, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.20-1.65] and lung adenocarcinoma (OR = 1.92, 95% CI: 1.51-2.22), but not squamous lung carcinoma (OR = 1.04, 95% CI: 0.83-1.29) or head and neck cancers (OR = 0.90, 95% CI: 0.70-1.05). Mediation analysis of the 5p15.33 instrument indicated an absence of direct effects on lung cancer risk (OR = 1.00, 95% CI: 0.95-1.04). Analysis of distinct 5p15.33 susceptibility variants estimated that TL mediates up to 40% of the observed associations with lung cancer risk. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support a causal role for long telomeres in lung cancer aetiology, particularly for adenocarcinoma, and demonstrate that telomere maintenance partially mediates the lung cancer susceptibility conferred by 5p15.33 loci.
- Published
- 2019
13. Health-related quality of life and survival of cancer patients admitted to ICUs: Results of the QALY study
- Author
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Cavalcanti, AB, Silva, UV, Normílio-Silva, KN, Silva, AN, Zancani, R, Giorgi, MJ, Dias, AD, Simone, AT, Safra, PL, Figueiredo, AC, Tunes-da-Silva, G, Lima, AC, Hajjar, LA, Auler, JO, Eluf-Neto, J, and Galas, FR
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Adherence to nutritional interventions in head and neck cancer patients: a systematic scoping review of the literature.
- Author
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de Oliveira Faria, S., Alvim Moravia, R., Howell, D., and Eluf Neto, J.
- Subjects
HEAD tumors ,CINAHL database ,PROFESSIONS ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,ORAL drug administration ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DIET therapy ,CANCER patients ,PATIENT compliance ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,NECK tumors ,NUTRITIONAL status - Abstract
Background: Dietary counselling provided by a dietitian, with or without oral nutritional supplements, can impact on nutritional and clinical outcomes in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients undergoing radiotherapy. However, little is known about the role of adherence to oral nutritional interventions in this population. This review aimed to map the literature for evidence of adherence to oral nutritional interventions in HNC patients undergoing radiotherapy and to identify gaps in knowledge in this field. Methods: A scoping review methodology was used to identify studies, extract data, and collate and summarise results. We searched Medline, Embase, Cochrane Central and CINAHL, from the earliest available time up to 8 January 2020. Results: In total, 2315 unique articles were identified, 163 studies were assessed in full and niner were included in the scoping review. The use of different measures to assess adherence and variability in the timing of the assessments was noted across studies. Despite identifying studies that have measured adherence to oral nutritional interventions, very few studies monitored its influence on clinical and nutritional outcomes in HNC patients or reported factors related to adherence. Conclusions: A robust evidence base is lacking for adherence to oral nutritional intervention in HNC patients. Overall, further studies evaluating the impact of oral nutritional interventions in HNC patients undergoing radiotherapy should measure adherence to the intervention. Early recognition of non‐adherence and the contributing factors could ensure intensification of nutritional support and better health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
15. P3.09-25 Survival Analysis in Young Adults with Lung Carcinoma
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Nicolau, J., primary, Koike Folgueira, M.A., additional, Roela, R., additional, Maistro, S., additional, Katayama, M.L., additional, Eluf Neto, J., additional, Luizaga, C., additional, Ribeiro, K., additional, and De Castro, G., additional
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- 2018
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16. Types of tobacco and alcoholic beverages use and head and neck cancer: A case-control study in state of São Paulo, Brazil, 1999–2015
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Kfouri, S.A., primary, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Kowalski, L.P., additional, Brasilino de Carvalho, M., additional, Moyses, R.A., additional, and Filho, V.W., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Moving from theory to practice: A participatory social network mapping approach to address unmet need for family planning in Benin
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Baker Ml, Bednarczyk Ra, Kaul P, Eluf-Neto J, Juma M, Ohkubo S, Villa L, Crowley T, Diakite M, Igras S, Williams Jt, Stellenberg El, Figueroa-Downing D, Hofmeyr Gj, Chiang Ed, Nelly Muiruri, Linton A, Moses Mwangi Gitonga, Peters M, Sheeder J, Evans Dp, Lundgren R, Ernest Muthami Mutua, Citeya A, Joyce Jebet Cheptum, Hammond C, Tshitenge S, Harlan S, Mentrop L, Limaye R, Ganiyu A, and Baggio Ml
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Civil society ,Population ,Social Theory ,Interviews as Topic ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Information system ,Benin ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Health policy ,Qualitative Research ,Strategic planning ,education.field_of_study ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Social Support ,Public relations ,Information and Communications Technology ,Family Planning Services ,Health education ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
In West Africa, social factors influence whether couples with unmet need for family planning act on birth-spacing desires. Tékponon Jikuagou is testing a social network-based intervention to reduce social barriers by diffusing new ideas. Individuals and groups judged socially influential by their communities provide entrée to networks. A participatory social network mapping methodology was designed to identify these diffusion actors. Analysis of monitoring data, in-depth interviews, and evaluation reports assessed the methodology's acceptability to communities and staff and whether it produced valid, reliable data to identify influential individuals and groups who diffuse new ideas through their networks. Results indicated the methodology's acceptability. Communities were actively and equitably engaged. Staff appreciated its ability to yield timely, actionable information. The mapping methodology also provided valid and reliable information by enabling communities to identify highly connected and influential network actors. Consistent with social network theory, this methodology resulted in the selection of informal groups and individuals in both informal and formal positions. In-depth interview data suggest these actors were diffusing new ideas, further confirming their influence/connectivity. The participatory methodology generated insider knowledge of who has social influence, challenging commonly held assumptions. Collecting and displaying information fostered staff and community learning, laying groundwork for social change.
- Published
- 2016
18. Genome-wide association analyses identify new susceptibility loci for oral cavity and pharyngeal cancer
- Author
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Lesseur, C. Diergaarde, B. Olshan, A.F. Wünsch-Filho, V. Ness, A.R. Liu, G. Lacko, M. Eluf-Neto, J. Franceschi, S. Lagiou, P. Macfarlane, G.J. Richiardi, L. Boccia, S. Polesel, J. Kjaerheim, K. Zaridze, D. Johansson, M. Menezes, A.M. Curado, M.P. Robinson, M. Ahrens, W. Canova, C. Znaor, A. Castellsagué, X. Conway, D.I. Holcátová, I. Mates, D. Vilensky, M. Healy, C.M. Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N. Fabiánová, E. Lissowska, J. Grandis, J.R. Weissler, M.C. Tajara, E.H. Nunes, F.D. De Carvalho, M.B. Thomas, S. Hung, R.J. Peters, W.H.M. Herrero, R. Cadoni, G. Bueno-De-Mesquita, H.B. Steffen, A. Agudo, A. Shangina, O. Xiao, X. Gaborieau, V. Chabrier, A. Anantharaman, D. Boffetta, P. Amos, C.I. McKay, J.D. Brennan, P.
- Abstract
We conducted a genome-wide association study of oral cavity and pharyngeal cancer in 6,034 cases and 6,585 controls from Europe, North America and South America. We detected eight significantly associated loci (P < 5 × 10 â'8), seven of which are new for these cancer sites. Oral and pharyngeal cancers combined were associated with loci at 6p21.32 (rs3828805, HLA-DQB1), 10q26.13 (rs201982221, LHPP) and 11p15.4 (rs1453414, OR52N2-TRIM5). Oral cancer was associated with two new regions, 2p23.3 (rs6547741, GPN1) and 9q34.12 (rs928674, LAMC3), and with known cancer-related loci - 9p21.3 (rs8181047, CDKN2B-AS1) and 5p15.33 (rs10462706, CLPTM1L). Oropharyngeal cancer associations were limited to the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region, and classical HLA allele imputation showed a protective association with the class II haplotype HLA-DRB1∗1301-HLA-DQA1∗0103-HLA-DQB1∗0603 (odds ratio (OR) = 0.59, P = 2.7 × 10-9). Stratified analyses on a subgroup of oropharyngeal cases with information available on human papillomavirus (HPV) status indicated that this association was considerably stronger in HPV-positive (OR = 0.23, P = 1.6 × 10-6) than in HPV-negative (OR = 0.75, P = 0.16) cancers. © 2016 Nature America, Inc. part of Springer Nature, All Rights reserved.
- Published
- 2016
19. Genome-wide association analyses identify new susceptibility loci for oral cavity and pharyngeal cancer.
- Author
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Lesseur, C, Diergaarde, B, Olshan, Af, Wünsch Filho, V, Ness, Ar, Liu, Guopeng, Lacko, M, Eluf Neto, J, Franceschi, S, Lagiou, P, Macfarlane, Gj, Richiardi, L, Boccia, Stefania, Polesel, J, Kjaerheim, K, Zaridze, D, Johansson, M, Menezes, Am, Curado, Mp, Robinson, M, Ahrens, W, Canova, C, Znaor, A, Castellsagué, X, Conway, Di, Holcátová, I, Mates, D, Vilensky, M, Healy, Cm, Szeszenia Dąbrowska, N, Fabiánová, E, Lissowska, J, Grandis, Jr, Weissler, Mc, Tajara, Eh, Nunes, Fd, de Carvalho, Mb, Thomas, S, Hung, Rj, Peters, Wh, Herrero, R, Cadoni, Gabriella, Bueno de Mesquita, Hb, Steffen, A, Agudo, A, Shangina, O, Xiao, X, Gaborieau, V, Chabrier, A, Anantharaman, D, Boffetta, Paolo, Amos, Ci, Mckay, Jd, Brennan, P. 1., Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), Cadoni, Gabriella (ORCID:0000-0001-8244-784X), Lesseur, C, Diergaarde, B, Olshan, Af, Wünsch Filho, V, Ness, Ar, Liu, Guopeng, Lacko, M, Eluf Neto, J, Franceschi, S, Lagiou, P, Macfarlane, Gj, Richiardi, L, Boccia, Stefania, Polesel, J, Kjaerheim, K, Zaridze, D, Johansson, M, Menezes, Am, Curado, Mp, Robinson, M, Ahrens, W, Canova, C, Znaor, A, Castellsagué, X, Conway, Di, Holcátová, I, Mates, D, Vilensky, M, Healy, Cm, Szeszenia Dąbrowska, N, Fabiánová, E, Lissowska, J, Grandis, Jr, Weissler, Mc, Tajara, Eh, Nunes, Fd, de Carvalho, Mb, Thomas, S, Hung, Rj, Peters, Wh, Herrero, R, Cadoni, Gabriella, Bueno de Mesquita, Hb, Steffen, A, Agudo, A, Shangina, O, Xiao, X, Gaborieau, V, Chabrier, A, Anantharaman, D, Boffetta, Paolo, Amos, Ci, Mckay, Jd, Brennan, P. 1., Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), and Cadoni, Gabriella (ORCID:0000-0001-8244-784X)
- Abstract
We conducted a genome-wide association study of oral cavity and pharyngeal cancer in 6,034 cases and 6,585 controls from Europe, North America and South America. We detected eight significantly associated loci (P < 5 × 10−8), seven of which are new for these cancer sites. Oral and pharyngeal cancers combined were associated with loci at 6p21.32 (rs3828805, HLA-DQB1), 10q26.13 (rs201982221, LHPP) and 11p15.4 (rs1453414, OR52N2–TRIM5). Oral cancer was associated with two new regions, 2p23.3 (rs6547741, GPN1) and 9q34.12 (rs928674, LAMC3), and with known cancer-related loci—9p21.3 (rs8181047, CDKN2B-AS1) and 5p15.33 (rs10462706, CLPTM1L). Oropharyngeal cancer associations were limited to the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region, and classical HLA allele imputation showed a protective association with the class II haplotype HLA-DRB1*1301–HLA-DQA1*0103–HLA-DQB1*0603 (odds ratio (OR) = 0.59, P = 2.7 × 10−9). Stratified analyses on a subgroup of oropharyngeal cases with information available on human papillomavirus (HPV) status indicated that this association was considerably stronger in HPV-positive (OR = 0.23, P = 1.6 × 10−6) than in HPV-negative (OR = 0.75, P = 0.16) cancers.
- Published
- 2016
20. Carcinoma of the cervix and tobacco smoking: Collaborative reanalysis of individual data on 13,541 women with carcinoma of the cervix and 23,017 women without carcinoma of the cervix from 23 epidemiological studies - International collaboration of epidemiological studies of cervical cancer
- Author
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Rajkumar, T., Appleby, P., Beral, V., Berrington, Da, Bull, D., Crossley, B., Green, J., Reeves, G., Sweetland, S., Kjaer, S., Peto, J., Painter, R., Vessey, M., Daling, J., Madeleine, M., Ray, R., Thomas, D., Hutchinson, F., Hererro, R., Ylitalo, N., Bosch, Fx, Castellsague, X., Hammouda, D., Eva Negri, Santos, C., Colin, D., Franceschi, S., Munoz, N., Plummer, M., Dillner, J., Bayo, S., Chaouki, N., Rolon, P., Brinton, L., Hildesheim, A., Lacey, J., Schiffman, M., Stein, L., Hannaford, P., Chichareon, S., Sitas, F., Eluf-Neto, J., La Vecchia, C., Skegg, D., Pike, M., Ursin, G., Ngelangel, C., Farley, T., Meirik, O., Rajkumar T, Appleby P, Beral V, Berrington DA, Bull D, Crossley B, Green J, Reeves G, Sweetland S, Kjaer S, Peto J, Painter R, Vessey M, Daling J, Madeleine M, Ray R, Thomas D, Hutchinson F, Hererro R, Ylitalo N, Bosch FX, Castellsague X, Hammouda D, Negri E, Santos C, Colin D, Franceschi S, Munoz N, Plummer M, Dillner J, Bayo S, Chaouki N, Rolon P, Brinton L, Hildesheim A, Lacey J, Schiffman M, Stein L, Hannaford P, Chichareon S, Sitas F, Eluf-Neto J, La Vecchia C, Skegg D, Pike M, Ursin G, Ngelangel C, Farley T, and Meirik O
- Abstract
Tobacco smoking has been classified as a cause of cervical cancer, but the effect of different patterns of smoking on risk is unclear. The International Collaboration of Epidemiological Studies of Cervical Cancer has brought together and combined individual data on 13,541 women with and 23,017 women without cervical carcinoma, from 23 epidemiological studies. Relative risks (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of carcinoma of the cervix in relation to tobacco smoking were calculated with stratification by study, age, sexual partners, age at first intercourse, oral contraceptive use and parity. Current smokers had a significantly increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix compared to never smokers (RR = 1.60 (95% CI: 1.48-1.73), p < 0.001). There was increased risk for past smokers also, though to a lesser extent (RR = 1.12 (1.01-1.25)), and there was no clear trend with time since stopping smoking (p-trend = 0.6). There was no association between smoking and adenocarcinoma of the cervix (RR = 0.89 (0.74-1.06) and 0.89 (0.72-1.10) for current and past smokers respectively), and the differences between the RRs for smoking and squamous cell and adenocarcinoma were statistically significant (current smoking p < 0.001 and past smoking p = 0.01). In current smokers, the RR of squamous cell carcinoma increased with increasing number of cigarettes smoked per day and also with younger age at starting smoking (p < 0.001 for each trend), but not with duration of smoking (p-trend = 0.3). Eight of the studies had tested women for cervical HPV-DNA, and in analyses restricted to women who tested positive, there was a significantly increased risk in current compared to never smokers for squamous cell carcinoma (RR = 1.95 (1.43-2.65)), but not for adenocarcinoma (RR = 1.06 (0.14-7.96)). In summary, smokers are at an increased risk of squamous cell but not of adenocarcinoma of the cervix. The risk of squamous cell carcinoma increases in current smokers with the number of cigarettes smoked per day and with younger age at starting smoking. (c) 2005 Wile-y-Liss. Inc. RI Eluf-Neto, Jose/B-2522-2009
- Published
- 2006
21. A Rare Truncating BRCA2 Variant and Genetic Susceptibility to Upper Aerodigestive Tract Cancer
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Delahaye-Sourdeix, M, Anantharaman, D, Timofeeva, MN, Gaborieau, V, Chabrier, A, Vallee, MP, Lagiou, P, Holcatova, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsague, X, Macfarlane, TV, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, NS, Conway, DI, Znaor, A, Healy, CM, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabianova, E, Mates, IN, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, MP, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wunsch-Filho, V, Eluf-Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Fernandez Garrote, L, Polesel, J, Lener, M, Jaworowska, E, Lubiński, J, BOCCIA, STEFANIA, Rajkumar, T, Samant, TA, Mahimkar, MB, Matsuo, K, Franceschi, S, Byrnes, G, Brennan, P, McKay, JD, Delahaye-Sourdeix, M, Anantharaman, D, Timofeeva, MN, Gaborieau, V, Chabrier, A, Vallee, MP, Lagiou, P, Holcatova, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsague, X, Macfarlane, TV, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, NS, Conway, DI, Znaor, A, Healy, CM, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabianova, E, Mates, IN, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, MP, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wunsch-Filho, V, Eluf-Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Fernandez Garrote, L, Polesel, J, Lener, M, Jaworowska, E, Lubiński, J, BOCCIA, STEFANIA, Rajkumar, T, Samant, TA, Mahimkar, MB, Matsuo, K, Franceschi, S, Byrnes, G, Brennan, P, and McKay, JD
- Published
- 2015
22. A Rare Truncating BRCA2 Variant and Genetic Susceptibility to Upper Aerodigestive Tract Cancer
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Delahaye Sourdeix, M, Anantharaman, D, Timofeeva, Mn, Gaborieau, V, Chabrier, A, Vallee, Mp, Lagiou, P, Holcatova, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsague, X, Macfarlane, Tv, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, N, Conway, Di, Znaor, A, Healy, Cm, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabianova, E, Mates, In, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, Mp, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wunsch Filho, V, Eluf Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Fernandez Garrote, L, Polesel, J, Lener, M, Jaworowska, E, Lubiński, J, Boccia, Stefania, Rajkumar, T, Samant, Ta, Mahimkar, Mb, Matsuo, K, Franceschi, S, Byrnes, G, Brennan, P, Mckay, Jd, Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), Delahaye Sourdeix, M, Anantharaman, D, Timofeeva, Mn, Gaborieau, V, Chabrier, A, Vallee, Mp, Lagiou, P, Holcatova, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsague, X, Macfarlane, Tv, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, N, Conway, Di, Znaor, A, Healy, Cm, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabianova, E, Mates, In, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, Mp, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wunsch Filho, V, Eluf Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Fernandez Garrote, L, Polesel, J, Lener, M, Jaworowska, E, Lubiński, J, Boccia, Stefania, Rajkumar, T, Samant, Ta, Mahimkar, Mb, Matsuo, K, Franceschi, S, Byrnes, G, Brennan, P, Mckay, Jd, and Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X)
- Abstract
Deleterious BRCA2 genetic variants markedly increase risk of developing breast cancer. A rare truncating BRCA2 genetic variant, rs11571833 (K3326X), has been associated with a 2.5-fold risk of lung squamous cell carcinoma but only a modest 26% increase in breast cancer risk. We analyzed the association between BRCA2 SNP rs11571833 and upper aerodigestive tract (UADT) cancer risk with multivariable unconditional logistic regression adjusted by sex and combinations of study and country for 5942 UADT squamous cell carcinoma case patients and 8086 control patients from nine different studies. All statistical tests were two-sided. rs11571833 was associated with UADT cancers (odds ratio = 2.53, 95% confidence interval = 1.89 to 3.38, P = 3x10(-10)) and was present in European, Latin American, and Indian populations but extremely rare in Japanese populations. The association appeared more apparent in smokers (current or former) compared with never smokers (P-het = .026). A robust association between a truncating BRCA2 variant and UADT cancer risk suggests that treatment strategies orientated towards BRCA2 mutations may warrant further investigation in UADT tumors.
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- 2015
23. The 12p13.33/RAD52 Locus and Genetic Susceptibility to Squamous Cell Cancers of Upper Aerodigestive Tract
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Delahaye Sourdeix, M, Oliver, J, Timofeeva, Mn, Gaborieau, V, Johansson, M, Chabrier, A, Wozniak, Mb, Brenner, Dr, Vallée, Mp, Anantharaman, D, Lagiou, P, Holcátová, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsagué, X, Macfarlane, Tv, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, N, Conway, Di, Znaor, A, Healy, Cm, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabianova, E, Mates, In, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, Mp, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wünsch Filho, V, Eluf Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Garrote, Lf, Serraino, D, Lener, M, Jaworowska, E, Lubiński, J, Boccia, Stefania, Rajkumar, T, Samant, Ta, Mahimkar, Mb, Matsuo, K, Franceschi, S, Byrnes, G, Brennan, P, Mckay, Jd, Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), Delahaye Sourdeix, M, Oliver, J, Timofeeva, Mn, Gaborieau, V, Johansson, M, Chabrier, A, Wozniak, Mb, Brenner, Dr, Vallée, Mp, Anantharaman, D, Lagiou, P, Holcátová, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsagué, X, Macfarlane, Tv, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, N, Conway, Di, Znaor, A, Healy, Cm, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabianova, E, Mates, In, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, Mp, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wünsch Filho, V, Eluf Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Garrote, Lf, Serraino, D, Lener, M, Jaworowska, E, Lubiński, J, Boccia, Stefania, Rajkumar, T, Samant, Ta, Mahimkar, Mb, Matsuo, K, Franceschi, S, Byrnes, G, Brennan, P, Mckay, Jd, and Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X)
- Abstract
Genetic variants located within the 12p13.33/RAD52 locus have been associated with lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC). Here, within 5,947 UADT cancers and 7,789 controls from 9 different studies, we found rs10849605, a common intronic variant in RAD52, to be also associated with upper aerodigestive tract (UADT) squamous cell carcinoma cases (OR = 1.09, 95% CI: 1.04-1.15, p = 6x10(-4)). We additionally identified rs10849605 as a RAD52 cis-eQTL inUADT(p = 1x10(-3)) and LUSC (p = 9x10(-4)) tumours, with the UADT/LUSC risk allele correlated with increased RAD52 expression levels. The 12p13.33 locus, encompassing rs10849605/RAD52, was identified as a significant somatic focal copy number amplification in UADT(n = 374, q-value = 0.075) and LUSC (n = 464, q-value = 0.007) tumors and correlated with higher RAD52 tumor expression levels (p = 6x10(-48) and p = 3x10(-29) in UADT and LUSC, respectively). In combination, these results implicate increased RAD52 expression in both genetic susceptibility and tumorigenesis of UADT and LUSC tumors.
- Published
- 2015
24. Using Prior Information from the Medical Literature in\ud GWAS of Oral Cancer Identifies Novel Susceptibility\ud Variant on Chromosome 4 - the AdAPT Method
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Johansson, M., Roberts, A., Chen, D., Li, Y., Delahaye-Sourdeix, M., Aswani, N., Greenwood, M.A., Benhamou, S., Lagiou, P., Holcatova, I., Richiardi, L., Kjaerheim, K., Agudo, A., Castellsague, X., Macfarlane, T.V., Barzan, L., Canova, C., Thakker, N.S., Conway, D.I., Znaor, A., Healy, C.M., Ahrens, W., Zaridze, D., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Lissowska, J., Fabianova, E., Mates, I.N., Bencko, V., Foretova, L., Janout, V., Curado, M.P., Koifman, S., Menezes, A., Wuensch-Filho, V., Eluf-Neto, J., Boffetta, P., Franceschi, S., Herrero, R., Fernandez Garrote, L., Talamini, R., Boccia, S., Galan, P., Vatten, L., Thomson, P., Zelenika, D., Lathrop, M., Byrnes, G., Cunningham, H., Brennan, P., Wakefield, J., and Mckay, J.D.
- Abstract
Background: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) require large sample sizes to obtain adequate statistical power, but\ud it may be possible to increase the power by incorporating complementary data. In this study we investigated the feasibility\ud of automatically retrieving information from the medical literature and leveraging this information in GWAS.\ud Methods: We developed a method that searches through PubMed abstracts for pre-assigned keywords and key concepts,\ud and uses this information to assign prior probabilities of association for each single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) with the\ud phenotype of interest - the Adjusting Association Priors with Text (AdAPT) method. Association results from a GWAS can\ud subsequently be ranked in the context of these priors using the Bayes False Discovery Probability (BFDP) framework. We\ud initially tested AdAPT by comparing rankings of known susceptibility alleles in a previous lung cancer GWAS, and\ud subsequently applied it in a two-phase GWAS of oral cancer.\ud Results: Known lung cancer susceptibility SNPs were consistently ranked higher by AdAPT BFDPs than by p-values. In the\ud oral cancer GWAS, we sought to replicate the top five SNPs as ranked by AdAPT BFDPs, of which rs991316, located in the\ud ADH gene region of 4q23, displayed a statistically significant association with oral cancer risk in the replication phase (perrare-allele\ud log additive p-value [ptrend] = 2.561023\ud ). The combined OR for having one additional rare allele was 0.83 (95% CI:\ud 0.76–0.90), and this association was independent of previously identified susceptibility SNPs that are associated with overall\ud UADT cancer in this gene region. We also investigated if rs991316 was associated with other cancers of the upper\ud aerodigestive tract (UADT), but no additional association signal was found.\ud Conclusion: This study highlights the potential utility of systematically incorporating prior knowledge from the medical\ud literature in genome-wide analyses using the AdAPT methodology. AdAPT is available online (url: http://services.gate.ac.uk/\ud lld/gwas/service/config).
- Published
- 2012
25. Diet and the risk of head and neck cancer: A pooled analysis in the INHANCE consortium
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Chuang, S.-C. Jenab, M. Heck, J.E. Bosetti, C. Talamini, R. Matsuo, K. Castellsague, X. Franceschi, S. Herrero, R. Winn, D.M. Vecchia, C.L. Morgenstern, H. Zhang, Z.-F. Levi, F. Maso, L.D. Kelsey, K. McClean, M.D. Vaughan, T. Lazarus, P. Muscat, J. Ramroth, H. Chen, C. Schwartz, S.M. Eluf-Neto, J. Hayes, R.B. Purdue, M. Boccia, S. Cadoni, G. Zaridze, D. Koifman, S. Curado, M.P. Ahrens, W. Benhamou, S. Matos, E. Lagiou, P. Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N. Olshan, A.F. Fernandez, L. Menezes, A. Agudo, A. Daudt, A.W. Merletti, F. MacFarlane, G.J. Kjaerheim, K. Mates, D. Holcatova, I. Schantz, S. Yu, G.-P. Simonato, L. Brenner, H. Mueller, H. Conway, D.I. Thomson, P. Fabianova, E. Znaor, A. Rudnai, P. Healy, C.M. Ferro, G. Brennan, P. Boffetta, P. Hashibe, M.
- Abstract
We investigated the association between diet and head and neck cancer (HNC) risk using data from the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology (INHANCE) consortium. The INHANCE pooled data included 22 case-control studies with 14,520 cases and 22,737 controls. Center-specific quartiles among the controls were used for food groups, and frequencies per week were used for single food items. A dietary pattern score combining high fruit and vegetable intake and low red meat intake was created. Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for the dietary items on the risk of HNC were estimated with a two-stage random-effects logistic regression model. An inverse association was observed for higher-frequency intake of fruit (4th vs. 1st quartile OR = 0.52, 95% CI = 0.43-0.62, p trend < 0.01) and vegetables (OR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.49-0.90, p trend = 0.01). Intake of red meat (OR = 1.40, 95% CI = 1.13-1.74, p trend = 0.13) and processed meat (OR = 1.37, 95% CI = 1.14-1.65, p trend < 0.01) was positively associated with HNC risk. Higher dietary pattern scores, reflecting high fruit/vegetable and low red meat intake, were associated with reduced HNC risk (per score increment OR = 0.90, 95% CI = 0.84-0.97). © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
- Published
- 2012
26. A sex-specific association between a 15q25 variant and upper aerodigestive tract cancers
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Chen, D. Truong, T. Gaborieau, V. Byrnes, G. Chabrier, A. Chuang, S.-C. Olshan, A.F. Weissler, M.C. Luo, J. Romkes, M. Buch, S. Nukui, T. Franceschi, S. Herrero, R. Talamini, R. Kelsey, K.T. Christensen, B. McClean, M.D. Lacko, M. Manni, J.J. Peters, W.H.M. Lubiński, J. Trubicka, J. Lener, M. Muscat, J.E. Lazarus, P. Wei, Q. Sturgis, E.M. Zhang, Z.-F. Chang, S.-C. Wang, R. Schwartz, S.M. Chen, C. Benhamou, S. Lagiou, P. Holcátová, I. Richiardi, L. Kjaerheim, K. Agudo, A. Castellsagué, X. Macfarlane, T.V. Barzan, L. Canova, C. Thakker, N.S. Conway, D.I. Znaor, A. Healy, C.M. Ahrens, W. Zaridze, D. Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N. Lissowska, J. Fabianova, E. Bucur, A. Bencko, V. Foretova, L. Janout, V. Curado, M.P. Koifman, S. Menezes, A. Wünsch-Filho, V. Eluf-Neto, J. Fernandez, L. Boccia, S. Hashibe, M. Hayes, R.B. Boffetta, P. Brennan, P. McKay, J.D.
- Abstract
Background: Sequence variants located at 15q25 have been associated with lung cancer and propensity to smoke. We recently reported an association between rs16969968 and risk of upper aerodigestive tract (UADT) cancers (oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx, larynx, and esophagus) in women (OR = 1.24, P = 0.003) with little effect in men (OR = 1.04, P = 0.35). Methods: In a coordinated genotyping study within the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology (INHANCE) consortium, we have sought to replicate these findings in an additional 4,604 cases and 6,239 controls from 10 independent UADT cancer case - control studies. Results: rs16969968 was again associated with UADT cancers in women (OR = 1.21, 95% CI = 1.08-1.36, P = 0.001) and a similar lack of observed effect in men [OR = 1.02, 95% CI = 0.95-1.09, P = 0.66; P-heterogeneity (P het) = 0.01]. In a pooled analysis of the original and current studies, totaling 8,572 UADT cancer cases and 11,558 controls, the association was observed among females (OR = 1.22, 95% CI = 1.12-1.34, P = 7 × 10 -6) but not males (OR = 1.02, 95% CI = 0.97-1.08, P = 0.35; P het = 6 × 10-4). There was little evidence for a sex difference in the association between this variant and cigarettes smoked per day, with male and female rs16969968 variant carriers smoking approximately the same amount more in the 11,991 ever smokers in the pooled analysis of the 14 studies (Phet = 0.86). Conclusions: This study has confirmed a sex difference in the association between the 15q25 variant rs16969968 and UADT cancers. Impact: Further research is warranted to elucidate the mechanisms underlying these observations.©2011 AACR.
- Published
- 2011
27. Low Educational Level is Associated with Advanced Cancer Stage in Brazil.
- Author
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Ribeiro, K., primary, Eluf Neto, J., additional, Luizaga, C., additional, Lombardo, V., additional, and Leite, V., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Cessation of alcohol drinking, tobacco smoking and the reversal of head and neck cancer risk
- Author
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Wunsch-Filho, V., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Fernandez, L., Koifman, S., Morgenstern, H., Zaridze, D., Sturgis, E. M, Menezes, A., Levi, F., Zhang, Z.-F., Franceschi, S., McClean, M., Talamini, R., Eluf-Neto, J., Smith, E., Lazarus, P., Schwartz, S. M, Muscat, J., Olshan, A. F, Boffetta, P., Purdue, M. P, Vecchia, C. L., Marron, M., Winn, D. M, Wei, Q., Hayes, R. B, Herrero, R., Matos, E., Rudnai, P., Kelsey, K., Lissowska, J., and Mates, I. N.
- Abstract
Background Quitting tobacco or alcohol use has been reported to reduce the head and neck cancer risk in previous studies. However, it is unclear how many years must pass following cessation of these habits before the risk is reduced, and whether the risk ultimately declines to the level of never smokers or never drinkers.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Multiple ADH genes are associated with upper aerodigestive cancers
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Hashibe, M., McKay, J.D., Curado, M.P., Oliveira, J.C., Koifman, S., Koifman, R., Zaridze, D., Shangina, O., Wünsch-Filho, V., Eluf-Neto, J., Levi, J.E., Matos, E., Lagiou, P., Lagiou, E., Benhamou, S., Bouchardy, C., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Menezes, A., Dall’, Agnol, M.M., Merletti, F., Richiardi, L., Fernandez, L., Lence, J., Talamini, R., Barzan, L., Mates, D., Mates, I.N., Kjaerheim, K., Macfarlane, G.J., Macfarlane, T.V., Simonato, L., Canova, C., Holcatova, I., Agudo, A., Castellsague, X., Lowry, R., Janout, V., Kollarova, H., Conway, D.I., McKinney, P.A., Znaor, Ariana, Fabianova, E., Bencko, V., Lissowska, J., Chabrier, A., Hung, R.J., Gaborieau, V., Boffetta, P., and Brennan, P.
- Subjects
ADH genes ,upper aerodigestive cancers - Abstract
Alcohol is an important risk factor for upper aerodigestive cancers and is principally metabolized by alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) enzymes. We have investigated six ADH genetic variants in over 3, 800 aerodigestive cancer cases and 5, 200 controls from three individual studies. Gene variants rs1229984 (ADH1B) and rs1573496 (ADH7) were significantly protective against aerodigestive cancer in each individual study and overall (P = 10(-10) and 10(-9), respectively). These effects became more apparent with increasing alcohol consumption (P for trend = 0.0002 and 0.065, respectively). Both gene effects were independent of each other, implying that multiple ADH genes may be involved in upper aerodigestive cancer etiology.
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- 2008
30. Chlamydia trachomatis and invasive cervical cancer: a pooled analysis of the IARC multicentric case-control study
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Smith, J.S., Bosetti, C, Munoz, N., Herrero, R, Bosch, F.X., Eluf-Neto, J, Meijer, C.J.L.M., van den Brule, AJ, Franceschi, S, Peeling, RW, and VU University medical center
- Published
- 2004
31. Cigarette, Cigar, and Pipe Smoking and the Risk of Head and Neck Cancers: Pooled Analysis in the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology Consortium
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Wyss, A, Hashibe, M, Chuang, S, Lee, Ya, Zhang, Z, Yu, G, Winn, Dm, Wei, Q, Talamini, R, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Sturgis, Em, Smith, E, Shangina, O, Schwartz, Sm, Schantz, S, Rudnai, P, Purdue, Mp, Eluf Neto, J, Muscat, J, Morgenstern, H, Michaluart, P, Menezes, A, Matos, E, Mates, In, Lissowska, J, Levi, F, Lazarus, P, La Vecchia, C, Koifman, S, Herrero, R, Hayes, Rb, Franceschi, S, Wunsch Filho, V, Fernandez, L, Fabianova, E, Daudt, Aw, Dal Maso, L, Curado, Mp, Chen, C, Castellsague, X, De Carvalho, Mb, Cadoni, Gabriella, Boccia, Stefania, Brennan, P, Boffetta, P, Olshan, Af, Cadoni, Gabriella (ORCID:0000-0001-8244-784X), Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), Wyss, A, Hashibe, M, Chuang, S, Lee, Ya, Zhang, Z, Yu, G, Winn, Dm, Wei, Q, Talamini, R, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Sturgis, Em, Smith, E, Shangina, O, Schwartz, Sm, Schantz, S, Rudnai, P, Purdue, Mp, Eluf Neto, J, Muscat, J, Morgenstern, H, Michaluart, P, Menezes, A, Matos, E, Mates, In, Lissowska, J, Levi, F, Lazarus, P, La Vecchia, C, Koifman, S, Herrero, R, Hayes, Rb, Franceschi, S, Wunsch Filho, V, Fernandez, L, Fabianova, E, Daudt, Aw, Dal Maso, L, Curado, Mp, Chen, C, Castellsague, X, De Carvalho, Mb, Cadoni, Gabriella, Boccia, Stefania, Brennan, P, Boffetta, P, Olshan, Af, Cadoni, Gabriella (ORCID:0000-0001-8244-784X), and Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X)
- Abstract
Cigar and pipe smoking are considered risk factors for head and neck cancers, but the magnitude of effect estimates for these products has been imprecisely estimated. By using pooled data from the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology (INHANCE) Consortium (comprising 13,935 cases and 18,691 controls in 19 studies from 1981 to 2007), we applied hierarchical logistic regression to more precisely estimate odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for cigarette, cigar, and pipe smoking separately, compared with reference groups of those who had never smoked each single product. Odds ratios for cigar and pipe smoking were stratified by ever cigarette smoking. We also considered effect estimates of smoking a single product exclusively versus never having smoked any product (reference group). Among never cigarette smokers, the odds ratio for ever cigar smoking was 2.54 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.93, 3.34), and the odds ratio for ever pipe smoking was 2.08 (95% CI: 1.55, 2.81). These odds ratios increased with increasing frequency and duration of smoking (Ptrend ≤ 0.0001). Odds ratios for cigar and pipe smoking were not elevated among ever cigarette smokers. Head and neck cancer risk was elevated for those who reported exclusive cigar smoking (odds ratio = 3.49, 95% CI: 2.58, 4.73) or exclusive pipe smoking (odds ratio = 3.71, 95% CI: 2.59, 5.33). These results suggest that cigar and pipe smoking are independently associated with increased risk of head and neck cancers
- Published
- 2013
32. Using prior information from the medical literature in GWAS of oral cancer identifies novel susceptibility variant on chromosome 4--the AdAPT method
- Author
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Johansson, M, Roberts, A, Chen, D, Li, Yuan, Delahaye Sourdeix, M, Aswani, N, Greenwood, Ma, Benhamou, S, Lagiou, P, Holcátová, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsagué, X, Macfarlane, Tv, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, N, Conway, Di, Znaor, A, Healy, Cm, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabiánová, E, Mates, In, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, Mp, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wünsch Filho, V, Eluf Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Franceschi, S, Herrero, R, Fernandez Garrote, L, Talamini, R, Boccia, Stefania, Galan, P, Vatten, L, Thomson, P, Zelenika, D, Lathrop, M, Byrnes, G, Cunningham, H, Brennan, P, Wakefield, J, Mckay, Jd, Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), Johansson, M, Roberts, A, Chen, D, Li, Yuan, Delahaye Sourdeix, M, Aswani, N, Greenwood, Ma, Benhamou, S, Lagiou, P, Holcátová, I, Richiardi, L, Kjaerheim, K, Agudo, A, Castellsagué, X, Macfarlane, Tv, Barzan, L, Canova, C, Thakker, N, Conway, Di, Znaor, A, Healy, Cm, Ahrens, W, Zaridze, D, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Lissowska, J, Fabiánová, E, Mates, In, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Curado, Mp, Koifman, S, Menezes, A, Wünsch Filho, V, Eluf Neto, J, Boffetta, P, Franceschi, S, Herrero, R, Fernandez Garrote, L, Talamini, R, Boccia, Stefania, Galan, P, Vatten, L, Thomson, P, Zelenika, D, Lathrop, M, Byrnes, G, Cunningham, H, Brennan, P, Wakefield, J, Mckay, Jd, and Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X)
- Abstract
Background: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) require large sample sizes to obtain adequate statistical power, but it may be possible to increase the power by incorporating complementary data. In this study we investigated the feasibility of automatically retrieving information from the medical literature and leveraging this information in GWAS. Methods: We developed a method that searches through PubMed abstracts for pre-assigned keywords and key concepts, and uses this information to assign prior probabilities of association for each single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) with the phenotype of interest - the Adjusting Association Priors with Text (AdAPT) method. Association results from a GWAS can subsequently be ranked in the context of these priors using the Bayes False Discovery Probability (BFDP) framework. We initially tested AdAPT by comparing rankings of known susceptibility alleles in a previous lung cancer GWAS, and subsequently applied it in a two-phase GWAS of oral cancer. Results: Known lung cancer susceptibility SNPs were consistently ranked higher by AdAPT BFDPs than by p-values. In the oral cancer GWAS, we sought to replicate the top five SNPs as ranked by AdAPT BFDPs, of which rs991316, located in the ADH gene region of 4q23, displayed a statistically significant association with oral cancer risk in the replication phase (per-rare-allele log additive p-value [p(trend)] = 2.5 x 10(-3)). The combined OR for having one additional rare allele was 0.83 (95% CI: 0.76-0.90), and this association was independent of previously identified susceptibility SNPs that are associated with overall UADT cancer in this gene region. We also investigated if rs991316 was associated with other cancers of the upper aerodigestive tract (UADT), but no additional association signal was found. Conclusion: This study highlights the potential utility of systematically incorporating prior knowledge from the medical literature in genome-wide analyses using the AdAPT methodolog
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- 2012
33. Diet and the risk of head and neck cancer: a pooled analysis in the INHANCE consortium
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Chuang, S, Jenab, M, Heck, Je, Bosetti, C, Talamini, R, Matsuo, K, Castellsague, X, Franceschi, S, Herrero, R, Winn, Dm, La Vecchia, C, Morgenstern, H, Zhang, Z, Levi, F, Dal Maso, L, Kelsey, K, Mcclean, Md, Vaughan, T, Lazarus, P, Muscat, J, Ramroth, H, Chen, Chen, Schwartz, Sm, Eluf Neto, J, Hayes, Rb, Purdue, M, Boccia, Stefania, Cadoni, Gabriella, Zaridze, D, Koifman, S, Curado, Mp, Ahrens, W, Benhamou, S, Matos, E, Lagiou, P, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Olshan, Af, Fernandez, L, Menezes, A, Agudo, A, Daudt, Aw, Merletti, F, Macfarlane, Gj, Kjaerheim, K, Mates, D, Holcatova, I, Schantz, S, Yu, G, Simonato, L, Brenner, H, Mueller, H, Conway, Di, Thomson, P, Fabianova, E, Znaor, A, Rudnai, P, Healy, Cm, Ferro, Giorgia, Brennan, P, Boffetta, P, Hashibe, M., Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), Cadoni, Gabriella (ORCID:0000-0001-8244-784X), Chuang, S, Jenab, M, Heck, Je, Bosetti, C, Talamini, R, Matsuo, K, Castellsague, X, Franceschi, S, Herrero, R, Winn, Dm, La Vecchia, C, Morgenstern, H, Zhang, Z, Levi, F, Dal Maso, L, Kelsey, K, Mcclean, Md, Vaughan, T, Lazarus, P, Muscat, J, Ramroth, H, Chen, Chen, Schwartz, Sm, Eluf Neto, J, Hayes, Rb, Purdue, M, Boccia, Stefania, Cadoni, Gabriella, Zaridze, D, Koifman, S, Curado, Mp, Ahrens, W, Benhamou, S, Matos, E, Lagiou, P, Szeszenia Dabrowska, N, Olshan, Af, Fernandez, L, Menezes, A, Agudo, A, Daudt, Aw, Merletti, F, Macfarlane, Gj, Kjaerheim, K, Mates, D, Holcatova, I, Schantz, S, Yu, G, Simonato, L, Brenner, H, Mueller, H, Conway, Di, Thomson, P, Fabianova, E, Znaor, A, Rudnai, P, Healy, Cm, Ferro, Giorgia, Brennan, P, Boffetta, P, Hashibe, M., Boccia, Stefania (ORCID:0000-0002-1864-749X), and Cadoni, Gabriella (ORCID:0000-0001-8244-784X)
- Abstract
We investigated the association between diet and head and neck cancer (HNC) risk using data from the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology (INHANCE) consortium. The INHANCE pooled data included 22 case-control studies with 14,520 cases and 22,737 controls. Center-specific quartiles among the controls were used for food groups, and frequencies per week were used for single food items. A dietary pattern score combining high fruit and vegetable intake and low red meat intake was created. Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for the dietary items on the risk of HNC were estimated with a two-stage random-effects logistic regression model. An inverse association was observed for higher-frequency intake of fruit (4th vs. 1st quartile OR = 0.52, 95% CI = 0.43-0.62, p (trend) < 0.01) and vegetables (OR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.49-0.90, p (trend) = 0.01). Intake of red meat (OR = 1.40, 95% CI = 1.13-1.74, p (trend) = 0.13) and processed meat (OR = 1.37, 95% CI = 1.14-1.65, p (trend) < 0.01) was positively associated with HNC risk. Higher dietary pattern scores, reflecting high fruit/vegetable and low red meat intake, were associated with reduced HNC risk (per score increment OR = 0.90, 95% CI = 0.84-0.97).
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- 2012
34. A sex-specific association between a 15q25 variant and upper aerodigestive tract cancers
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Chen, D., Truong, T., Gaborieau, V., Byrnes, G., Chabrier, A., Chuang, S.C., Olshan, A.F., Weissler, M.C., Luo, J., Romkes, M., Buch, S., Nukui, T., Franceschi, S., Herrero, R., Talamini, R., Kelsey, K.T., Christensen, B., McClean, M.D., Lacko, M., Manni, J.J., Peters, W.H.M., Lubinski, J., Trubicka, J., Lener, M., Muscat, J.E., Lazarus, P., Wei, Q., Sturgis, E.M., Zhang, Z.F., Chang, S.C., Wang, R., Schwartz, S.M., Chen, C., Benhamou, S., Lagiou, P., Holcatova, I., Richiardi, L., Kjaerheim, K., Agudo, A., Castellsague, X., Macfarlane, T.V., Barzan, L., Canova, C., Thakker, N.S., Conway, D.I., Znaor, A., Healy, C.M., Ahrens, W., Zaridze, D., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Lissowska, J., Fabianova, E., Bucur, A., Bencko, V., Foretova, L., Janout, V., Curado, M.P., Koifman, S., Menezes, A., Wunsch-Filho, V., Eluf-Neto, J., Fernandez, L., Boccia, S., Hashibe, M., Hayes, R.B., Boffetta, P., Brennan, P., McKay, J.D., Chen, D., Truong, T., Gaborieau, V., Byrnes, G., Chabrier, A., Chuang, S.C., Olshan, A.F., Weissler, M.C., Luo, J., Romkes, M., Buch, S., Nukui, T., Franceschi, S., Herrero, R., Talamini, R., Kelsey, K.T., Christensen, B., McClean, M.D., Lacko, M., Manni, J.J., Peters, W.H.M., Lubinski, J., Trubicka, J., Lener, M., Muscat, J.E., Lazarus, P., Wei, Q., Sturgis, E.M., Zhang, Z.F., Chang, S.C., Wang, R., Schwartz, S.M., Chen, C., Benhamou, S., Lagiou, P., Holcatova, I., Richiardi, L., Kjaerheim, K., Agudo, A., Castellsague, X., Macfarlane, T.V., Barzan, L., Canova, C., Thakker, N.S., Conway, D.I., Znaor, A., Healy, C.M., Ahrens, W., Zaridze, D., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Lissowska, J., Fabianova, E., Bucur, A., Bencko, V., Foretova, L., Janout, V., Curado, M.P., Koifman, S., Menezes, A., Wunsch-Filho, V., Eluf-Neto, J., Fernandez, L., Boccia, S., Hashibe, M., Hayes, R.B., Boffetta, P., Brennan, P., and McKay, J.D.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 96598.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access), BACKGROUND: Sequence variants located at 15q25 have been associated with lung cancer and propensity to smoke. We recently reported an association between rs16969968 and risk of upper aerodigestive tract (UADT) cancers (oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx, larynx, and esophagus) in women (OR = 1.24, P = 0.003) with little effect in men (OR = 1.04, P = 0.35). METHODS: In a coordinated genotyping study within the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology (INHANCE) consortium, we have sought to replicate these findings in an additional 4,604 cases and 6,239 controls from 10 independent UADT cancer case-control studies. RESULTS: rs16969968 was again associated with UADT cancers in women (OR = 1.21, 95% CI = 1.08-1.36, P = 0.001) and a similar lack of observed effect in men [OR = 1.02, 95% CI = 0.95-1.09, P = 0.66; P-heterogeneity (P(het)) = 0.01]. In a pooled analysis of the original and current studies, totaling 8,572 UADT cancer cases and 11,558 controls, the association was observed among females (OR = 1.22, 95% CI = 1.12-1.34, P = 7 x 10(-6)) but not males (OR = 1.02, 95% CI = 0.97-1.08, P = 0.35; P(het) = 6 x 10(-4)). There was little evidence for a sex difference in the association between this variant and cigarettes smoked per day, with male and female rs16969968 variant carriers smoking approximately the same amount more in the 11,991 ever smokers in the pooled analysis of the 14 studies (P(het) = 0.86). CONCLUSIONS: This study has confirmed a sex difference in the association between the 15q25 variant rs16969968 and UADT cancers. IMPACT: Further research is warranted to elucidate the mechanisms underlying these observations.
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- 2011
35. Serum antibodies to human papillomavirus 16 proteins in women from Brazil with invasive cervical carcinoma
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Sun Y, Eluf-Neto J, FRANCESC XAVIER BOSCH JOSÉ, Muñoz N, Jm, Walboomers, Cj, Meijer, Kv, Shah, Clayman B, and Rp, Viscidi
- Subjects
Adult ,Papillomavirus E7 Proteins ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,Middle Aged ,Antibodies, Viral ,Uterine Cervical Dysplasia ,Repressor Proteins ,Tumor Virus Infections ,Case-Control Studies ,Humans ,Female ,Papillomaviridae ,Brazil ,Aged - Abstract
Serum samples from 194 cases and 217 controls participating in a case-control study of invasive cervical cancer in Brazil were examined for antibodies to human papillomavirus (HPV) 16 virus-like particles (VLPs) by ELISA. The prevalence of antibody in cases and controls was 47.4 versus 24.4% (P0.001). The prevalence was higher in women who had HPV-16 DNA in the genital tract (54.2%) than in those with other HPVs (36.8%) or no HPVs (44.8%), but the differences were not statistically significant. Among cases and controls, HPV-16 VLP antibodies were associated with a greater number of lifetime sexual partners (chi2 for trend, P0.001). Among controls, age was inversely associated with HPV-16 VLP seroreactivity (chi2 for trend, P = 0.019). The sera were previously tested for antibodies to HPV-16 E6 and E7 oncoproteins; there was no correlation between antibody titers to HPV-16 E6 or E7 and VLPs. The HPV-16 serological assays were compared as screening tests for invasive cervical cancer. The sensitivity and specificity estimates were 47.4 and 75.6% for HPV-16 VLP serology, 63.4 and 89.9% for either HPV-16 E6 or E7 serology, and 53.6 and 93.6% for high titers of either HPV-16 E6 or E7 or VLP antibodies. The utility of HPV-16 VLP ELISA as a screening test for invasive cervical cancer is limited by a high seroprevalence in women with probable prior exposure to HVP 16 but without disease.
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- 1999
36. Education, tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption, and IL-2 and IL-6 gene polymorphisms in the survival of head and neck cancer
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López, R.V.M., primary, Zago, M.A., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Curado, M.P., additional, Daudt, A.W., additional, da Silva-Junior, W.A., additional, Zanette, D.L., additional, Levi, J.E., additional, de Carvalho, M.B., additional, Kowalski, L.P., additional, Abrahão, M., additional, de Góis-Filho, J.F., additional, Boffetta, P., additional, and Wünsch-Filho, V., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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37. Genome-wide association study of HPV seropositivity
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Chen, D., primary, McKay, J. D., additional, Clifford, G., additional, Gaborieau, V., additional, Chabrier, A., additional, Waterboer, T., additional, Zaridze, D., additional, Lissowska, J., additional, Rudnai, P., additional, Fabianova, E., additional, Bencko, V., additional, Janout, V., additional, Foretova, L., additional, Mates, I. N., additional, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., additional, Curado, M. P., additional, Koifman, S., additional, Menezes, A., additional, Wunsch-Filho, V., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Fernandez Garrote, L., additional, Matos, E., additional, Zelenika, D., additional, Boland, A., additional, Boffetta, P., additional, Pawlita, M., additional, Lathrop, M., additional, and Brennan, P., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. P2-442 European ancestry, phenotypic characteristics and risk of cutaneous melanoma: a case-control study in Sao Paulo, Brazil
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Luiz, O., primary, Gianini, R., additional, Francisco, G., additional, Toledo, F., additional, Souza, S., additional, Sanches, J., additional, Festa-Neto, C., additional, Gattas, G., additional, Chammas, R., additional, and Eluf-Neto, J., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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39. Human papillomavirus-related serological markers of invasive cervical carcinoma in Brazil
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Sun Y, Eluf-Neto J, FRANCESC XAVIER BOSCH JOSÉ, Muñoz N, Booth M, Jm, Walboomers, Kv, Shah, and Rp, Viscidi
- Subjects
Adult ,Radioimmunoprecipitation Assay ,Papillomavirus E7 Proteins ,Carcinoma ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,Middle Aged ,Antibodies, Viral ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Repressor Proteins ,Risk Factors ,Case-Control Studies ,DNA, Viral ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Papillomaviridae ,Biomarkers ,Brazil ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging - Abstract
Masked sera from 194 cases and 217 controls participating in a case-control study of cervical cancer in Brazil were examined for antibodies to human papillomavirus (HPV) 16 E6 and E7 by radioimmunoprecipitation assay. Radiolabeled full-length E6 and E7 proteins expressed by in vitro transcription and translation in rabbit reticulocyte lysate were used as antigens. The antibody prevalences in cases and controls were: 54.1% versus 6% for E6; 30.4% versus 4.6% for E7; 63.4% versus 10.1% for either E6 or E7; and 21.1% versus 0.5% for both E6 and E7. The corresponding odds ratios were 35 ([95% confidence interval (CI)], 15-83), 10 (95% CI, 4-25), 28 (95% CI, 13-61) and 87 (95% CI, 10-736). The most marked contrast between cases and controls was observed for sera with high antibody titers (cpm6000) with an odds ratio of 239 (95% CI, 29-1946) for E6 or E7. Seroreactivity in cases was partially type specific; women who had HPV-16 DNA in the genital tract had higher antibody prevalence rates than those who were negative for HPV DNA. Reactivity to the E6 protein was associated with the stage of disease; the antibody prevalence was 62.7% in cases with stages II-IV and 31.0% in cases with stage I (P0.005). HPV-16 serology and HPV polymerase chain reaction were compared as markers for invasive cervical cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1994
40. TP53 and EGFR mutations in combination with lifestyle risk factors in tumours of the upper aerodigestive tract from South America
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Szymańska, K., primary, Levi, J.E., additional, Menezes, A., additional, Wünsch-Filho, V., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Koifman, S., additional, Matos, E., additional, Daudt, A.W., additional, Curado, M.P., additional, Villar, S., additional, Pawlita, M., additional, Waterboer, T., additional, Boffetta, P., additional, Hainaut, P., additional, and Brennan, P., additional
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- 2009
- Full Text
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41. Cessation of alcohol drinking, tobacco smoking and the reversal of head and neck cancer risk
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Marron, M., primary, Boffetta, P., additional, Zhang, Z.-F., additional, Zaridze, D., additional, Wunsch-Filho, V., additional, Winn, D. M, additional, Wei, Q., additional, Talamini, R., additional, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., additional, Sturgis, E. M, additional, Smith, E., additional, Schwartz, S. M, additional, Rudnai, P., additional, Purdue, M. P, additional, Olshan, A. F, additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Muscat, J., additional, Morgenstern, H., additional, Menezes, A., additional, McClean, M., additional, Matos, E., additional, Mates, I. N., additional, Lissowska, J., additional, Levi, F., additional, Lazarus, P., additional, Vecchia, C. L., additional, Koifman, S., additional, Kelsey, K., additional, Herrero, R., additional, Hayes, R. B, additional, Franceschi, S., additional, Fernandez, L., additional, Fabianova, E., additional, Daudt, A. W, additional, Maso, L. D., additional, Curado, M. P., additional, Cadoni, G., additional, Chen, C., additional, Castellsague, X., additional, Boccia, S., additional, Benhamou, S., additional, Ferro, G., additional, Berthiller, J., additional, Brennan, P., additional, Moller, H., additional, and Hashibe, M., additional
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- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Re: "Determinants of Quality of Interview and Impact on Risk Estimates in a Case-Control Study of Bladder Cancer"
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Eluf-Neto, J., primary
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- 2009
- Full Text
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43. Incidence and risk factors of aplastic anemia in Latin American countries: the LATIN case-control study
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Maluf, E., primary, Hamerschlak, N., additional, Cavalcanti, A. B., additional, Junior, A. A., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Falcao, R. P., additional, Lorand-Metze, I. G., additional, Goldenberg, D., additional, Santana, C. L., additional, de Oliveira Werneck Rodrigues, D., additional, Passos, L. N. d. M., additional, Rosenfeld, L. G. M., additional, Pitta, M., additional, Loggetto, S., additional, Feitosa Ribeiro, A. A., additional, Velloso, E. D., additional, Kondo, A. T., additional, de Miranda Coelho, E. O., additional, Pintao, M. C. T., additional, de Souza, H. M., additional, Borbolla, J. R., additional, and Pasquini, R., additional
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- 2009
- Full Text
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44. Opportunity for catch-up HPV vaccination in young women after first delivery
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Rama, C. H., primary, Villa, L. L., additional, Pagliusi, S., additional, Andreoli, M. A., additional, Costa, M. C., additional, Thomann, P., additional, Alves, V. A. F., additional, Longatto-Filho, A., additional, and Eluf-Neto, J., additional
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- 2009
- Full Text
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45. Sexual behaviors and the risk of head and neck cancers
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Heck, J.E., primary, Berthiller, J., additional, Vaccarella, S., additional, Winn, D.M., additional, Smith, E.M., additional, Shangina, O., additional, Schwartz, S.M., additional, Purdue, M., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Menezes, A., additional, McClean, M.D., additional, Matos, E., additional, Koifman, S., additional, Kelsey, K.T., additional, Herrero, R., additional, Hayes, R.B., additional, Franceschi, S., additional, Wünsch-Filho, V., additional, Fernandez, L., additional, Daudt, A.W., additional, Curado, M.P., additional, Chen, C., additional, Castellsagué, X., additional, Ferro, G., additional, Brennan, P., additional, Boffetta, P., additional, and Hashibe, M., additional
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- 2008
- Full Text
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46. Serologic response to HPV and the risk of head and neck cancer
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Ribeiro, K.B, primary, Levi, J.E., additional, Curado, M.P., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Koifman, S., additional, Filho, V. Wunsch, additional, Menezes, A., additional, Daudt, A.W., additional, Matos, E., additional, Fernandez, L., additional, Boffetta, P., additional, and Brennan, P., additional
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- 2008
- Full Text
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47. Prognostic significance of matrix metalloproteinases 1 and 3 polymorphisms in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck
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López, R.V.M., primary, Zago, M.A., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Silva-Jr, W.A., additional, Zanette, D.L., additional, Levi, J.E., additional, Carvalho, M.B., additional, Curado, M.P., additional, Boffetta, P., additional, and Wünsch-Filho, V., additional
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. TP53 mutations and HPV infections in tumours of the upper aerodigestive tract from Latin America
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Szymañska, K., primary, Levi, J.E., additional, Daudt, A.W., additional, Wünsch-Filho, V., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Curado, M.P., additional, Koifman, S., additional, Menezes, A., additional, Matos, E., additional, Fernandez, L., additional, Boffetta, P., additional, Tommassino, M., additional, Gheit, T., additional, Hainaut, P., additional, and Brennan, P., additional
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- 2008
- Full Text
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49. Oral Health and Risk of Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck and Esophagus: Results of Two Multicentric Case-Control Studies
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Guha, N., primary, Boffetta, P., additional, Wunsch Filho, V., additional, Eluf Neto, J., additional, Shangina, O., additional, Zaridze, D., additional, Curado, M. P., additional, Koifman, S., additional, Matos, E., additional, Menezes, A., additional, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., additional, Fernandez, L., additional, Mates, D., additional, Daudt, A. W., additional, Lissowska, J., additional, Dikshit, R., additional, and Brennan, P., additional
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- 2007
- Full Text
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50. Alcohol Drinking in Never Users of Tobacco, Cigarette Smoking in Never Drinkers, and the Risk of Head and Neck Cancer: Pooled Analysis in the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology Consortium
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Hashibe, M., primary, Brennan, P., additional, Benhamou, S., additional, Castellsague, X., additional, Chen, C., additional, Curado, M. P., additional, Maso, L. D., additional, Daudt, A. W., additional, Fabianova, E., additional, Wunsch-Filho, V., additional, Franceschi, S., additional, Hayes, R. B., additional, Herrero, R., additional, Koifman, S., additional, La Vecchia, C., additional, Lazarus, P., additional, Levi, F., additional, Mates, D., additional, Matos, E., additional, Menezes, A., additional, Muscat, J., additional, Eluf-Neto, J., additional, Olshan, A. F., additional, Rudnai, P., additional, Schwartz, S. M., additional, Smith, E., additional, Sturgis, E. M., additional, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., additional, Talamini, R., additional, Wei, Q., additional, Winn, D. M., additional, Zaridze, D., additional, Zatonski, W., additional, Zhang, Z.-F., additional, Berthiller, J., additional, and Boffetta, P., additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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