An infective, mostly viral, basis has been found in an increasing number of different human cancers. In all cases, the neoplasm is a rare response to the relevant infection, which is usually present in persistent form, and requiring specific cofactors for malignancy to develop. In some cases, epidemiological evidence of infectivity preceded and promoted identification of the specific infection involved and even the discovery of the microbe itself, as in Burkitt's lymphoma and cervix cancer. In other cases, the discovery of the agent came first as in stomach and nasopharynx cancers, and epidemiology has been concerned mainly with confirming the relationship, measuring the size of the risk and identifying cofactors. Infection-linked cancers i...
Background: Infections with certain viruses, bacteria, and parasites are strong risk factors for spe...
Abstract Background Since the beginning of the twentieth century, infection has emerged as a fundame...
The etiology of childhood cancers has been studied for more than 40 years. However, most if not all ...
Cancer is a complex group of diseases with multiple eventual causes. The underlying causes are not f...
Immunodeficiency, be it congenital, therapeutic, or infectious in origin, increases the risk of cert...
Infectious agents are a significant and theoretically preventable cause of cancer. Therefore, the id...
AbstractSlightly more than 20% of the global cancer burden can presently be linked to infectious age...
Various estimates of the proportion of all cancers attributable to infections have been proposed but...
Background: Infection is one of the main risk factors for cancer. Objectives: Epidemiology, pathogen...
In the past 25 years revelations on the genesis of human cancer have come at an increasing pace. Res...
[[abstract]]Viruses can contribute to the development of several human cancers. 1 Among them, malig...
Infectious and parasitic diseases represent the third cause of cancer worldwide. A number of infecti...
Viruses are ubiquitous and are also the pathogenic agents that are most commonly associated with neo...
The first human tumor virus was discovered in the middle of the last century by Anthony Epstein, Ber...
Immunodeficiency, be it congenital, therapeutic, or infec-tious in origin, increases the risk of cer...
Background: Infections with certain viruses, bacteria, and parasites are strong risk factors for spe...
Abstract Background Since the beginning of the twentieth century, infection has emerged as a fundame...
The etiology of childhood cancers has been studied for more than 40 years. However, most if not all ...
Cancer is a complex group of diseases with multiple eventual causes. The underlying causes are not f...
Immunodeficiency, be it congenital, therapeutic, or infectious in origin, increases the risk of cert...
Infectious agents are a significant and theoretically preventable cause of cancer. Therefore, the id...
AbstractSlightly more than 20% of the global cancer burden can presently be linked to infectious age...
Various estimates of the proportion of all cancers attributable to infections have been proposed but...
Background: Infection is one of the main risk factors for cancer. Objectives: Epidemiology, pathogen...
In the past 25 years revelations on the genesis of human cancer have come at an increasing pace. Res...
[[abstract]]Viruses can contribute to the development of several human cancers. 1 Among them, malig...
Infectious and parasitic diseases represent the third cause of cancer worldwide. A number of infecti...
Viruses are ubiquitous and are also the pathogenic agents that are most commonly associated with neo...
The first human tumor virus was discovered in the middle of the last century by Anthony Epstein, Ber...
Immunodeficiency, be it congenital, therapeutic, or infec-tious in origin, increases the risk of cer...
Background: Infections with certain viruses, bacteria, and parasites are strong risk factors for spe...
Abstract Background Since the beginning of the twentieth century, infection has emerged as a fundame...
The etiology of childhood cancers has been studied for more than 40 years. However, most if not all ...