Effects of common genetic variants associated with colorectal cancer risk on survival outcomes after diagnosis: A large population‐based cohort study
出版年份 2019 全文链接
标题
Effects of common genetic variants associated with colorectal cancer risk on survival outcomes after diagnosis: A large population‐based cohort study
作者
关键词
-
出版物
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -
出版商
Wiley
发表日期
2019-07-05
DOI
10.1002/ijc.32550
参考文献
相关参考文献
注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。- Scientists rise up against statistical significance
- (2019) Valentin Amrhein et al. NATURE
- Association analyses identify 31 new risk loci for colorectal cancer susceptibility
- (2019) Philip J. Law et al. Nature Communications
- Exploring causality in the association between circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D and colorectal cancer risk: a large Mendelian randomisation study
- (2018) Yazhou He et al. BMC Medicine
- Genome-wide scan of the effect of common nsSNPs on colorectal cancer survival outcome
- (2018) Evropi Theodoratou et al. BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
- Global cancer statistics 2018: GLOBOCAN estimates of incidence and mortality worldwide for 36 cancers in 185 countries
- (2018) Freddie Bray et al. CA-A CANCER JOURNAL FOR CLINICIANS
- Discovery of common and rare genetic risk variants for colorectal cancer
- (2018) Jeroen R. Huyghe et al. NATURE GENETICS
- The ASA's Statement onp-Values: Context, Process, and Purpose
- (2016) Ronald L. Wasserstein et al. AMERICAN STATISTICIAN
- Differences in survival for patients with familial and sporadic cancer
- (2016) Myeongjee Lee et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
- Genetic associations at 53 loci highlight cell types and biological pathways relevant for kidney function
- (2016) Cristian Pattaro et al. Nature Communications
- Common genetic variation and survival after colorectal cancer diagnosis: a genome-wide analysis
- (2015) Amanda I. Phipps et al. CARCINOGENESIS
- Analyses of 7,635 Patients with Colorectal Cancer Using Independent Training and Validation Cohorts Show That rs9929218 in CDH1 Is a Prognostic Marker of Survival
- (2015) C. G. Smith et al. CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
- Recurrent Coding Sequence Variation Explains Only A Small Fraction of the Genetic Architecture of Colorectal Cancer
- (2015) Maria N. Timofeeva et al. Scientific Reports
- Genetic susceptibility variants associated with colorectal cancer prognosis
- (2013) Anna Abulí et al. CARCINOGENESIS
- GWAS-identified colorectal cancer susceptibility loci associated with clinical outcomes
- (2012) Jingyao Dai et al. CARCINOGENESIS
- Association Between Colorectal Cancer Susceptibility Loci and Survival Time After Diagnosis With Colorectal Cancer
- (2012) Amanda I. Phipps et al. GASTROENTEROLOGY
- Power and Sample Size Calculations for SNP Association Studies With Censored Time-to-Event Outcomes
- (2012) Kouros Owzar et al. GENETIC EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Annotation of functional variation in personal genomes using RegulomeDB
- (2012) A. P. Boyle et al. GENOME RESEARCH
- Common variation near CDKN1A, POLD3 and SHROOM2 influences colorectal cancer risk
- (2012) Malcolm G Dunlop et al. NATURE GENETICS
- Genotype-Environment Interactions in Microsatellite Stable/Microsatellite Instability-Low Colorectal Cancer: Results from a Genome-Wide Association Study
- (2011) J. C. Figueiredo et al. CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY BIOMARKERS & PREVENTION
- A linear complexity phasing method for thousands of genomes
- (2011) Olivier Delaneau et al. NATURE METHODS
- Ten Common Genetic Variants Associated with Colorectal Cancer Risk Are Not Associated with Survival after Diagnosis
- (2010) A. Tenesa et al. CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
- A method and server for predicting damaging missense mutations
- (2010) Ivan A Adzhubei et al. NATURE METHODS
- Data quality control in genetic case-control association studies
- (2010) Carl A Anderson et al. Nature Protocols
- Predicting the effects of coding non-synonymous variants on protein function using the SIFT algorithm
- (2009) Prateek Kumar et al. Nature Protocols
- A Flexible and Accurate Genotype Imputation Method for the Next Generation of Genome-Wide Association Studies
- (2009) Bryan N. Howie et al. PLoS Genetics
Publish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn MoreFind the ideal target journal for your manuscript
Explore over 38,000 international journals covering a vast array of academic fields.
Search