Cancer Institute A national cancer institute
designated cancer center

Esther M. John

Publication Details

  • Variation in genes related to obesity, weight, and weight change and risk of contralateral breast cancer in the WECARE Study population.

    Brooks JD, Bernstein L, Teraoka SN, Knight JA, Mellemkjær L, John EM, Malone KE, Reiner AS, Lynch CF, Concannon P, Haile RW, Bernstein JL. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2012; 21 (12): 2261-7

    Body mass index (BMI), a known breast cancer risk factor, could influence breast risk through mechanistic pathways related to sex hormones, insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, and altered levels of adipose-derived hormones. Results from studies of the relationship between BMI and second primary breast cancer have been mixed. To explore the relationship between BMI and asynchronous contralateral breast cancer (CBC), we examined whether variants in genes related to obesity, weight, and weight change are associated with CBC risk.

    PubMedID: 23033454

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