Background: Statutory State-based cancer registries are considered the ‘gold standard’ for researchers identifying cancer cases in Australia, but research using self-report or administrative health datasets (e.g. hospital records) may not have linkage to a Cancer Registry and need to identify cases. This study investigated the validity of administrative and self-reported data compared with records in a State-wide Cancer Registry in identifying invasive breast cancer cases. Methods: Cases of invasive breast cancer recorded on the New South Wales (NSW) Cancer Registry between July 2004 and December 2008 (the study period) were identified for women in the 45 and Up Study. Registry cases were separately compared with suspected cases ascertained...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Stratification of women with screen-detected ductal carcinoma in sit...
Rationale: Screening has been found to reduce breast cancer mortality at a population level in Austr...
Background: Cancer of unknown primary (CUP) is a common cancer yet little is known about the reliabi...
BACKGROUND: Statutory State-based cancer registries are considered the 'gold standard' for researche...
Background: Routinely-collected and self-reported health data are increasingly being used to identif...
Background: Data from centralised, population-based statutory cancer registries are generally consid...
Abstract Objective: The aim of this study is to determine the validity of self‐reported cancer data ...
Background: Monitoring treatment patterns is crucial to improving cancer patient care. Our aim was t...
Epidemiological research often ascertains cancer history via self-reported questionnaires. We assess...
© 2015 Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use. Objectives: Informing c...
BACKGROUND: Epidemiological data surrounding non-melanomatous skin cancer (NMSC) is highly variabl...
\ua0 Epidemiological data surrounding non-melanomatous skin cancer (NMSC) is highly variable, in par...
Objective. Medical chart abstraction is the gold standard for collecting breast cancer treatment dat...
Background: Epidemiological data surrounding non-melanomatous skin cancer (NMSC) is highly variable...
ABSTRACTObjectivesAlthough outcomes for the majority of women diagnosed with primary breast cancer a...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Stratification of women with screen-detected ductal carcinoma in sit...
Rationale: Screening has been found to reduce breast cancer mortality at a population level in Austr...
Background: Cancer of unknown primary (CUP) is a common cancer yet little is known about the reliabi...
BACKGROUND: Statutory State-based cancer registries are considered the 'gold standard' for researche...
Background: Routinely-collected and self-reported health data are increasingly being used to identif...
Background: Data from centralised, population-based statutory cancer registries are generally consid...
Abstract Objective: The aim of this study is to determine the validity of self‐reported cancer data ...
Background: Monitoring treatment patterns is crucial to improving cancer patient care. Our aim was t...
Epidemiological research often ascertains cancer history via self-reported questionnaires. We assess...
© 2015 Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use. Objectives: Informing c...
BACKGROUND: Epidemiological data surrounding non-melanomatous skin cancer (NMSC) is highly variabl...
\ua0 Epidemiological data surrounding non-melanomatous skin cancer (NMSC) is highly variable, in par...
Objective. Medical chart abstraction is the gold standard for collecting breast cancer treatment dat...
Background: Epidemiological data surrounding non-melanomatous skin cancer (NMSC) is highly variable...
ABSTRACTObjectivesAlthough outcomes for the majority of women diagnosed with primary breast cancer a...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Stratification of women with screen-detected ductal carcinoma in sit...
Rationale: Screening has been found to reduce breast cancer mortality at a population level in Austr...
Background: Cancer of unknown primary (CUP) is a common cancer yet little is known about the reliabi...