Educational differences in postmenopausal breast cancer--quantifying indirect effects through health behaviors, body mass index and reproductive patterns

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Educational differences in postmenopausal breast cancer--quantifying indirect effects through health behaviors, body mass index and reproductive patterns is …
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scholarly articleQ13442814

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P819ADS bibcode2013PLoSO...878690H
P356DOI10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0078690
P932PMC publication ID3812044
P698PubMed publication ID24205296
P5875ResearchGate publication ID258351463

P50authorAnne TjønnelandQ28356235
Niels KeidingQ62560029
Ulla A HvidtfeldtQ37386067
Naja Hulvej RodQ37386086
Theis LangeQ37386106
Ingelise AndersenQ40787216
Finn DiderichsenQ42157476
Thorkild I.A. SørensenQ57549603
Eva PrescottQ60369768
P2860cites workA further critique of the analytic strategy of adjusting for covariates to identify biologic mediationQ24792915
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Identifiability and exchangeability for direct and indirect effectsQ28239361
Age at first birth, parity and risk of breast cancer: a meta-analysis of 8 studies from the Nordic countriesQ28308117
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Explaining the relation between education and postmenopausal breast cancerQ73119082
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Postmenopausal sex hormones in relation to body fat distributionQ83222329
Familial breast cancer: collaborative reanalysis of individual data from 52 epidemiological studies including 58,209 women with breast cancer and 101,986 women without the diseaseQ30665466
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Joint effects of nulliparity and other breast cancer risk factorsQ35287701
Circulating sex hormones and breast cancer risk factors in postmenopausal women: reanalysis of 13 studiesQ35287715
Comparison of adiposity measures as risk factors in postmenopausal womenQ35654222
The contribution of risk factors to the higher incidence of invasive and in situ breast cancers in women with higher levels of education in the European prospective investigation into cancer and nutritionQ35874242
A three-way decomposition of a total effect into direct, indirect, and interactive effectsQ36586111
Physical activity and breast cancer: a systematic review.Q36666202
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Quantifying mediating effects of endogenous estrogen and insulin in the relation between obesity, alcohol consumption, and breast cancerQ37380757
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Social inequality in incidence of and survival from cancer in a population-based study in Denmark, 1994-2003: Summary of findings.Q43711046
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Does educational level determine screening participation?Q44052128
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Body mass index, serum sex hormones, and breast cancer risk in postmenopausal womenQ44472863
A simple unified approach for estimating natural direct and indirect effectsQ44739331
Education and risk of breast cancer in the Norwegian-Swedish women's lifestyle and health cohort studyQ44880130
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Study design, exposure variables, and socioeconomic determinants of participation in Diet, Cancer and Health: a population-based prospective cohort study of 57,053 men and women in Denmark.Q50545977
Socioeconomic position and lifestyle in relation to breast cancer incidence among postmenopausal women: a prospective cohort study, Denmark, 1993-2006.Q50552914
Socioeconomic status and breast cancer in Denmark.Q50574074
Fertility pattern does not explain social gradient in breast cancer in denmark.Q50578552
The enduring and evolving relationship between social class and breast cancer burden: a review of the literature.Q51716842
Explaining the socioeconomic variation in cancer risk in the Norwegian Women and Cancer Study.Q51832625
Methods for pooling results of epidemiologic studies: the Pooling Project of Prospective Studies of Diet and Cancer.Q51943445
Alcohol and Breast Cancer in WomenQ57268454
The reversed social gradient: Higher breast cancer mortality in the higher educated compared to lower educated. A comparison of 11 European populations during the 1990sQ57535486
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalQ20007257
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P433issue10
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P304page(s)e78690
P577publication date2013-10-24
P1433published inPLOS OneQ564954
P1476titleEducational differences in postmenopausal breast cancer--quantifying indirect effects through health behaviors, body mass index and reproductive patterns
P478volume8

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cites work (P2860)
Q30995983Existing data sources in clinical epidemiology: the Scandinavian Thrombosis and Cancer Cohort
Q46068528Racial/Ethnic Differences in the Impact of Neighborhood Social and Built Environment on Breast Cancer Risk: The Neighborhoods and Breast Cancer Study

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