© 2005 Oxford University Press
IN THIS ISSUE
| The first 10% of the full text of this article appears below. |
Surveillance Bias and Cancer Risk in the Relatives of Patients
The diagnosis of the first cancer in a family may lead to the screening of the patient's relatives and their subsequent diagnosis of cancer. To determine if surveillance bias was associated with an overestimation of cancer risk in the relatives of patients with a first cancer diagnosis, Lorenzo Bermejo and Hemminki (p. 1575) followed 1 677 722 offspring and siblings of 846 468 probands from the year of diagnosis of the proband's first cancer to the diagnosis of the first familial tumor or cancer using the Swedish Family Cancer Database. The risk of in situ breast cancer in daughters
Paternity Rates After Testicular Cancer Treatment
Transcription Factor E2F1, Telomerase, and Glioblastoma
Alcohol, Steroid Receptors, and Breast Cancer
Improving Cancer Outcomes Measurement
Coronary Heart Disease Among Tamoxifen Users