Ovarian cancerCausalityObservational studies and clinical validation have suggested a link between thyroid dysfunction and an elevated ovarian cancer (OC) risk. However, whether this association indicates a cause-and-effect relationship remains uncertain. We aimed to investigate the plausible causal impact ...
Ovarian cancer (OC) accounts for ∼225 000 cases each year worldwide, causing over 140 000 deaths [1], while in the United States there are ∼22 280 new OC cases annually and 15 500 deaths [2]. Approximately 90% of cancers believed to have arisen in the ovaries are carcinomas; th...
Assessment of Preoperative TSH Serum Level and Thyroid Cancer Occurrence in Patients with AUS/FLUS Thyroid Nodule Diagnosis. Biomedicines. 2022 Aug 8;10(8):1916. doi: https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10081916. PMID: 36009464; PMCID: PMC9405687. d’Assunção VRN, Montagna E, d’...
Adenovirus-mediated transfer of the PTEN gene inhibits human colorectal cancer growth in vitro and in vivo More recently, the tumor-suppressive effect of PTEN has been reported in ovarian and thyroid tumors that are wild type for PTEN. In the present study,... Y Saito,X Swanson,AM Mhashilka...
Does ovarian cancer start in the fallopian tubes? Can ovarian cancer cause infertility? What is ovarian cancer? Does stomach cancer spread quickly? Can thyroid cancer spread to the stomach? What is borderline ovarian cancer? Does ovarian cancer have a high death rate?
Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most aggressive form of the gynecological cancer types and is the fourth most common cause of female cancer death in developed countries (1). The ovary is a complex tissue, and although ovarian cancers can originate from germ cells or granulosa-theca cells...
No relationship emerged between ovarian cancer risk and diabetes (RR 0.80, 95% CI 0.54–1.19), hypertension (RR 0.85, 95% CI 0.68–1.06), thyroid diseases (RR 0.89, 95% CI 0.63–1.13) and cholelithiasis (RR 0.86, 95% CI 0.66–1.12). A decreased frequency of ovarian cancer was seen ...
(10) again revealed elevated relative risks (95% CI) of 2.9 (1.2–7.1) for ovarian cancer, 2.4 (0.7–8.4) for colon cancer, 4.65 (0.8–25.6) for thyroid cancer, and 2.3 (0.8–6.7) for melanomas. These Swedish cohort studies were expanded by Melin et al. in 2006 (11) to evaluate...
www.nature.com/scientificreports OPEN Ovarian cancer treatment with a tumor-targeting and gene expression-controllable lipoplex received: 05 August 2015 accepted: 14 March 2016 Published: 30 March 2016 Zhi-Yao He1,*, Feng Deng2,*, Xia-Wei Wei1, Cui-Cui Ma1, Min Luo1, Ping ...
Risk varied by type of cancer: breast (4.37; 3.88–4.93), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (3.72; 2.87–4.83), Hodgkin's lymphoma (2.38; 1.92–2.96), leukemia (14.01; 10.16–19.32), thyroid (1.25; 1.08–1.44) and melanoma (1.05; 0.83–1.33). This study identifies significant increased risk of ...