Zobrazeno 1 - 5
of 5
pro vyhledávání: '"Jenny E. Paredes Sanchez"'
Autor:
Sayed Imtiaz, Mohamed Alshal, Raavi Gupta, Mubarak Akadri, Jovanny Zabaleta, Maksim Agaronov, Maria Munoz-Sagastibelza, Laura Martello-Rooney, Jenny E. Paredes Sanchez, Ellen Li
Publikováno v:
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention. 29:B059-B059
Pancreatic cancer is a deadly disease with only 8% of the patients surviving 5 years (1). Recent data published for African Americans (AA) showed that this population has the highest death rate and shortest survival of any racial/ethnic group in the
Autor:
Jenny E. Paredes Sanchez, Catherine Burkhart, A. Palileo, Laura Martello-Rooney, Maria Munoz-Sagastibelza, Oluwafeyikemi Okome
Publikováno v:
Cancer Research. 78:3878-3878
Pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer death in the United States with only 7% of diagnosed patients surviving 5 years. Most pancreatic cancer patients are not surgical candidates due to advanced stage at diagnosis. Also, current sys
Autor:
Maria Munoz-Sagastibelza, Jenny E. Paredes Sanchez, Jennie L. Williams, Laura Martello-Rooney, Ping Ji
Publikováno v:
Cancer Research. 77:2692-2692
Despite progress in closing the gap, health disparities still persist among African American (AA) colon cancer patients both in incidence and death rates. Previous studies from our group reported that colon tumors from AAs displayed hypermethylation
Autor:
Jenny E. Paredes Sanchez, Raavi Gupta, Oluwafeyikemi Okome, Laura Martello-Rooney, Ariella Moshchinsky, Maria Munoz-Sagastibelza
Publikováno v:
Cancer Research. 77:1091-1091
Pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer death in the United States with only 7% of diagnosed patients surviving 5 years. Current systemic chemotherapies have not been very effective at decreasing tumor burden, but nonetheless expose p
Autor:
Jenny E. Paredes Sanchez, Maria Munoz-Sagastibelza, Laura Martello-Rooney, Jennie L. Williams, Ji Peing
Publikováno v:
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention. 26:C35-C35
Colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence and mortality rates in African Americans (AAs) are up to 38% higher than in Caucasian Americans (CAs). Moreover, our previous studies reported that AAs have hypermethylated DNA regions in inflammatory genes such as N