Review of literature related to breast cancer

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Review of literature of breast cancer

Breast cancer and alcohol consumption: a review of the anti c1, lauby-secretan b2, bello py3, chajes v1, romieu information1nutritional epidemiology group, international agency for research on cancer, lyon. Electronic address: romieui@ctcontext: consumption of alcoholic beverages is one of the single most important known and modifiable risk factor for human cancer.

Among women, breast cancer is the most common cancer worldwide and the leading cause of cancer-related mortality. Consumption of alcoholic beverages is causally associated with female breast cancer and the association shows a linear dose-response relationship.

The role of heavy drinking has been long recognized and even a moderate intake is associated with an increased risk for breast cancer. The present review is an update of the current evidence on the association between alcohol consumption and breast cancer risk.

The aim is to gain further insight into this association and to improve our current understanding of the effects of the major modifying ce acquisition: epidemiologic and experimental studies published since the most recent international agency for research on cancer (iarc) monograph on alcoholic beverages were identified in pubmed using a combination of keywords such as alcohol, breast cancer, polymorphisms, menopausal ce synthesis: cumulative lifetime consumption, drinking frequency, drinking patterns and timing of exposure each modulate the association between alcohol consumption and breast cancer. Hormonal status, genetic polymorphisms, and nutritional factors may interact with ethanol metabolism and further influence breast cancer sions: better standardization among experimental and epidemiologic designs in assessing alcohol intake and timing of exposure may improve our understanding of the heterogeneity observed across studies, possibly allowing the quantification of the effects of occasional heavy drinking and the identification of a window of higher susceptibility to breast cancer ght © 2014.

Gov'treviewmesh termsage factorsalcohol drinking/adverse effects*alcoholic beverages/adverse effectsalcoholism/complicationsbreast neoplasms/chemically induced*breast neoplasms/etiologydose-response relationship, drugfemalehumansmiddle agedrisk factorslinkout - more resourcesfull text sourceselsevier scienceclinicalkeymedicalbreast cancer - genetic alliancealcohol - medlineplus health informationbreast cancer - medlineplus health informationpubmed commons home. Commentshow to join pubmed commonshow to cite this comment:Ncbi > literature > ncbi web site requires javascript to tionresourcesall resourceschemicals & bioassaysbiosystemspubchem bioassaypubchem compoundpubchem structure searchpubchem substanceall chemicals & bioassays resources...

Toall how tochemicals & bioassaysdna & rnadata & softwaredomains & structuresgenes & expressiongenetics & medicinegenomes & mapshomologyliteratureproteinssequence analysistaxonomytraining & tutorialsvariationabout ncbi accesskeysmy ncbisign in to ncbisign : abstractformatsummarysummary (text)abstractabstract (text)medlinexmlpmid listapplysend tochoose destinationfileclipboardcollectionse-mailordermy bibliographycitation managerformatsummary (text)abstract (text)medlinexmlpmid listcsvcreate file1 selected item: 15504918formatsummarysummary (text)abstractabstract (text)medlinexmlpmid listmesh and other datae-mailsubjectadditional texte-maildidn't get the message? To clipboardadd to collectionsorder articlesadd to my bibliographygenerate a file for use with external citation management comment in pubmed commons belowj natl cancer inst monogr.

2004;(33):ptive review of the literature on breast cancer outcomes: 1990 through blatt j1, armetta c, yabroff kr, liang w, lawrence information1department of oncology and cancer clinical and economic outcomes core, lombardi comprehensive cancer center, georgetown university medical center, washington, dc 20007, usa. Mandelbj@ abstractbackground: there is increasing interest in the incorporation of nonbiomedical outcomes into cancer ive: our goal was to review the use of nonbiomedical outcomes in research on breast cancer sources: we conducted a medline search of all studies on breast cancer quality of life, preferences, satisfaction, and economics that were published during the period from january 1, 1990, through december 31, 2000.

We also searched bibliographies of published selection: we included original primary research and excluded reviews, methods papers, studies conducted outside the united states and western europe, or studies with fewer than 100 abstraction: data were abstracted by using a structured synthesis: there were 1089 articles identified; 230 were included. The most frequently reported outcomes were health-related quality of life (54%) followed by economic analyses (38%) and patient satisfaction (14%); only 9% measured patient preferences.

Methodologic flaws were prevalent and included use of nonstandard economic methods, insufficient power, low or differential response rates, and lack of control for baseline sion: at present, outcomes measurement is variable in its approach and application to breast cancer care. Gov't, mesh termsbreast neoplasms/mortalitybreast neoplasms/psychologybreast neoplasms/therapy*femalehumansoutcome assessment (health care)*quality of lifegrant supporths08395/hs/ahrq hhs/united statesr01ca72908/ca/nci nih hhs/united statest332ca09314-19/ca/nci nih hhs/united stateslinkout - more resourcesfull text sourcessilverchair information systemsother literature sourcescos scholar universemedicalbreast cancer - genetic alliancebreast cancer - medlineplus health informationpubmed commons home.