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Your search keyword '"Gram, Inger T."' showing total 17 results

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17 results on '"Gram, Inger T."'

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1. Never-smokers and the fraction of breast cancer attributable to second-hand smoke from parents during childhood: the Norwegian Women and Cancer Study 1991-2018.

2. Smoking-Related Risks of Colorectal Cancer by Anatomical Subsite and Sex.

3. Smoking and breast cancer risk by race/ethnicity and oestrogen and progesterone receptor status: the Multiethnic Cohort (MEC) study.

4. The fraction of breast cancer attributable to smoking: The Norwegian women and cancer study 1991-2012.

5. Smoking and Risk of Breast Cancer in a Racially/Ethnically Diverse Population of Mainly Women Who Do Not Drink Alcohol.

6. Genotypes and haplotypes in the insulin-like growth factors, their receptors and binding proteins in relation to plasma metabolic levels and mammographic density.

7. Breast cancer screening programme as setting for an adjunct research project: effect on programme attendance.

8. Long-term weight change and risk of breast cancer in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study.

9. Prospective analysis of circulating metabolites and endometrial cancer risk.

10. Breast Cancer Risk After Recent Childbirth: A Pooled Analysis of 15 Prospective Studies.

11. Pooled analysis of active cigarette smoking and invasive breast cancer risk in 14 cohort studies.

12. The Influence of Hormonal Factors on the Risk of Developing Cervical Cancer and Pre-Cancer: Results from the EPIC Cohort.

13. Smoking increases rectal cancer risk to the same extent in women as in men: results from a Norwegian cohort study.

14. Smoking increases rectal cancer risk to the same extent in women as in men: results from a Norwegian cohort study.

15. Is Colposcopic Biopsy Overused among Women with a Cytological Diagnosis of Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance (ASCUS)?

16. Correction: The Influence of Hormonal Factors on the Risk of Developing Cervical Cancer and Pre-Cancer: Results from the EPIC Cohort.

17. Smoking increases rectal cancer risk to the same extent in women as in men: results from a Norwegian cohort study.

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