Background and goals: Comparing cancer incidence by migrant studies is one of the main approaches to generate hypotheses on the aetiology of cancer. Immigrant studies are most informative when cancer incidence data are available from both the Source and the host country. Methods: The age standardised incidence rate (ASR) and standardised incidence ratio (SIR) of cancers among the Iranian immigrants were compared to the native Swedish population as the standard population by using the Swedish Family-Cancer Database (FCD) from 1958 to 2006. We also compared SIRs between Iranian immigrants and Iranian residents for whom the data were derived from the Iranian national cancer registry report of 2006. Results: Among the 65,501 Iranian immigrants,...
Introduction: After immigration, cancer rates among immigrant populations shift to rates in the coun...
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States (US). Immigrants from the Middle Ea...
<div><p>In 2010, cancer deaths accounted for more than 15% of all deaths worldwide, and this fractio...
The early cancer studies on immigrants, which started to appear some 50 years ago, showed that the i...
BACKGROUND: The changes of cancer incidence upon immigration can be used as an estimator of environm...
Traditionally there have been differences in cancer incidence across geographic regions. When immigr...
Background: Migrant studies offer a unique opportunity to analyze variation in disease occurrence du...
Background: We wanted to define lung cancer incidence rates by histological subtype among immigrants...
To examine the role of gender, age at immigration and length of stay on incidence trends of common c...
Environmental risk factors, particularly tobacco smoking, are important for transitional-cell carcin...
Background: Cancer risk varies geographically and across ethnic groups that can be monitored in canc...
Environmental exposures, particularly infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and tobacco, are known...
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma is linked to alcohol drinking, whereas esophageal adenocarcinoma ...
The objective of this study is to compare cancer risk among different generations of Middle Eastern ...
We studied the effect of new environment on the risk in and mortality of gynecological cancers in fi...
Introduction: After immigration, cancer rates among immigrant populations shift to rates in the coun...
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States (US). Immigrants from the Middle Ea...
<div><p>In 2010, cancer deaths accounted for more than 15% of all deaths worldwide, and this fractio...
The early cancer studies on immigrants, which started to appear some 50 years ago, showed that the i...
BACKGROUND: The changes of cancer incidence upon immigration can be used as an estimator of environm...
Traditionally there have been differences in cancer incidence across geographic regions. When immigr...
Background: Migrant studies offer a unique opportunity to analyze variation in disease occurrence du...
Background: We wanted to define lung cancer incidence rates by histological subtype among immigrants...
To examine the role of gender, age at immigration and length of stay on incidence trends of common c...
Environmental risk factors, particularly tobacco smoking, are important for transitional-cell carcin...
Background: Cancer risk varies geographically and across ethnic groups that can be monitored in canc...
Environmental exposures, particularly infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and tobacco, are known...
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma is linked to alcohol drinking, whereas esophageal adenocarcinoma ...
The objective of this study is to compare cancer risk among different generations of Middle Eastern ...
We studied the effect of new environment on the risk in and mortality of gynecological cancers in fi...
Introduction: After immigration, cancer rates among immigrant populations shift to rates in the coun...
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States (US). Immigrants from the Middle Ea...
<div><p>In 2010, cancer deaths accounted for more than 15% of all deaths worldwide, and this fractio...