© 2001 by Oxford University Press
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 93, No. 15, 1117,
August 1, 2001
© 2001 Oxford University Press
IN THIS ISSUE |
Women who experience preeclampsia during pregnancy have a reduced risk of breast cancer later in life. To investigate whether other placental abnormalities are also associated with a reduced risk of subsequent breast cancer, Cohn et al. (p. 1133) analyzed data from a cohort of nearly 4000 white women who had been pregnant at some point during the years 19591967 and for whom data were available on placental examinations and on subsequent development of invasive breast cancer. They found that smaller placentas, maternal floor infarction of the placenta, and increasing blood pressure during pregnancy
HER-2 Status of Primary and Metastatic Breast Cancers
Origin of Ovarian Tumors of Low Malignant Potential
Screening Interval for PSA Tests
RBP1L1 Expression in Human Carcinomas and Normal Testis
NQO1 Deficiency and DMBA-Induced Cancer