Publicaciones en colaboración con investigadores/as de University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (26)

2022

  1. Common variants in breast cancer risk loci predispose to distinct tumor subtypes

    Breast Cancer Research, Vol. 24, Núm. 1

  2. Physical activity, sedentary time and breast cancer risk: a Mendelian randomisation study

    British Journal of Sports Medicine, Vol. 56, Núm. 20, pp. 1157-1170

  3. Rare germline copy number variants (CNVs) and breast cancer risk

    Communications biology, Vol. 5, Núm. 1, pp. 65

2021

  1. Association of germline genetic variants with breast cancer-specific survival in patient subgroups defined by clinic-pathological variables related to tumor biology and type of systemic treatment

    Breast cancer research : BCR, Vol. 23, Núm. 1, pp. 86

  2. Breast cancer risk factors and survival by tumor subtype: Pooled analyses from the breast cancer association consortium

    Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention, Vol. 30, Núm. 4, pp. 623-642

  3. CYP3A7*1C allele: linking premenopausal oestrone and progesterone levels with risk of hormone receptor-positive breast cancers

    British Journal of Cancer, Vol. 124, Núm. 4, pp. 842-854

  4. Combined Associations of a Polygenic Risk Score and Classical Risk Factors With Breast Cancer Risk

    Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 113, Núm. 3, pp. 329-337

  5. Genetic insights into biological mechanisms governing human ovarian ageing

    Nature, Vol. 596, Núm. 7872, pp. 393-397

  6. Germline variants and breast cancer survival in patients with distant metastases at primary breast cancer diagnosis

    Scientific Reports, Vol. 11, Núm. 1

  7. Marital status and prostate cancer incidence: a pooled analysis of 12 case–control studies from the PRACTICAL consortium

    European Journal of Epidemiology, Vol. 36, Núm. 9, pp. 913-925

  8. Mendelian randomisation study of smoking exposure in relation to breast cancer risk

    British Journal of Cancer, Vol. 125, Núm. 8, pp. 1135-1145

  9. Publisher Correction: Trans-ancestry genome-wide association meta-analysis of prostate cancer identifies new susceptibility loci and informs genetic risk prediction (Nature Genetics, (2021), 53, 1, (65-75), 10.1038/s41588-020-00748-0)

    Nature Genetics

  10. Trans-ancestry genome-wide association meta-analysis of prostate cancer identifies new susceptibility loci and informs genetic risk prediction

    Nature Genetics, Vol. 53, Núm. 1, pp. 65-75