Background. Age-specific incidence rates for breast cancer in low-risk and high-risk ethnic populations differ by age at which the incidence maximum is reached: around 50 years in low-risk populations and over 60 years in high-risk populations. The interpretation of these differences remains unsettled, one line primarily referring to biological differences, the second one to cohort effects of rapidly increasing rates in young populations, and the third one to incomplete registration of cancer in the elderly. Methods. The nationwide Family-Cancer Database was used to analyze standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) and age at diagnosis of breast cancer in female immigrants to Sweden by their region of origin compared with women native to Sweden ...
Background and goals: Comparing cancer incidence by migrant studies is one of the main approaches to...
ABSTRACT-Age-standardized breast cancer rates were approxi-mately 30 % lower in U.S. black women com...
Background Fundamental etiologic differences have been suggested to cause earlier on...
The content of this article has been reviewed by independent peer reviewers to ensure that it is bal...
Breast cancer incidence has markedly increased in Western countries for reasons that are not entirel...
International audienceBased on US national cancer registry data, age differences at breast cancer di...
To examine the role of gender, age at immigration and length of stay on incidence trends of common c...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the hypothesis that breast cancer exhibits ethnic differences i...
Black women have lower age-standardized breast cancer incidence rates than White women in the United...
Analyses of data from cancer registries have shown a 10% unit difference in 5-year relative survival...
Background: The incidence of breast cancer among younger East Asian women has been increasing rapidl...
Black women have lower age-standardized breast cancer incidence rates than White women in the United...
Background Breast cancer incidence differs between non-immigrants and immigrants fro...
BACKGROUND: In 2003, for the first time, US breast cancer incidence rates have fallen. Experts argue...
Foreign and native populations differ in terms of breast cancer outcomes. Studies rarely distinguish...
Background and goals: Comparing cancer incidence by migrant studies is one of the main approaches to...
ABSTRACT-Age-standardized breast cancer rates were approxi-mately 30 % lower in U.S. black women com...
Background Fundamental etiologic differences have been suggested to cause earlier on...
The content of this article has been reviewed by independent peer reviewers to ensure that it is bal...
Breast cancer incidence has markedly increased in Western countries for reasons that are not entirel...
International audienceBased on US national cancer registry data, age differences at breast cancer di...
To examine the role of gender, age at immigration and length of stay on incidence trends of common c...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the hypothesis that breast cancer exhibits ethnic differences i...
Black women have lower age-standardized breast cancer incidence rates than White women in the United...
Analyses of data from cancer registries have shown a 10% unit difference in 5-year relative survival...
Background: The incidence of breast cancer among younger East Asian women has been increasing rapidl...
Black women have lower age-standardized breast cancer incidence rates than White women in the United...
Background Breast cancer incidence differs between non-immigrants and immigrants fro...
BACKGROUND: In 2003, for the first time, US breast cancer incidence rates have fallen. Experts argue...
Foreign and native populations differ in terms of breast cancer outcomes. Studies rarely distinguish...
Background and goals: Comparing cancer incidence by migrant studies is one of the main approaches to...
ABSTRACT-Age-standardized breast cancer rates were approxi-mately 30 % lower in U.S. black women com...
Background Fundamental etiologic differences have been suggested to cause earlier on...