2017
Race‐dependent Association of Sulfidogenic Bacteria with Colorectal Cancer
Wolf P, Yazici C, Kim H, Liu T, Carroll T, Augustus G, Mutlu E, Tussing‐Humphreys L, Braunschweig C, Xicola R, Jung B, Llor X, Ellis N, Gaskins H. Race‐dependent Association of Sulfidogenic Bacteria with Colorectal Cancer. The FASEB Journal 2017, 31 DOI: 10.1096/fasebj.31.1_supplement.315.2.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchNon-Hispanic whitesEnvironmental risk factorsColorectal cancerCRC casesRisk factorsAA casesFat intakeColonic mucosaCRC developmentBlock Brief 2000 food frequency questionnaireDisease statusAfrican AmericansAA controlsCRC risk factorsUninvolved colonic mucosaFood frequency questionnaireDietary fat intakePro-inflammatory pathwaysIntake of dairyTraining grantsSubset of subjectsColorectal Cancer ConsortiumNational Cancer InstituteRace-dependent associationsServings of dairyRace-dependent association of sulfidogenic bacteria with colorectal cancer
Yazici C, Wolf PG, Kim H, Cross TL, Vermillion K, Carroll T, Augustus GJ, Mutlu E, Tussing-Humphreys L, Braunschweig C, Xicola RM, Jung B, Llor X, Ellis NA, Gaskins HR. Race-dependent association of sulfidogenic bacteria with colorectal cancer. Gut 2017, 66: 1983. PMID: 28153960, PMCID: PMC5575988, DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2016-313321.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdenocarcinomaAdultAgedBlack or African AmericanCase-Control StudiesChicagoColonColorectal NeoplasmsDietDietary FatsDietary ProteinsFemaleHealth Status DisparitiesHumansIntestinal MucosaMaleMiddle AgedProspective StudiesReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionRisk FactorsSulfur-Reducing BacteriaWhite PeopleConceptsNon-Hispanic whitesEnvironmental risk factorsRisk factorsAA casesCRC casesColonic mucosaCRC developmentDisease statusAfrican AmericansCRC risk factorsUninvolved colonic mucosaColorectal cancer incidencePotential environmental risk factorsTumor-free controlsMultiple dietary componentsRace-dependent associationsEffect of dietColonic biopsiesColorectal cancerDaily servingsHealthy mucosaCancer incidenceDietary intakeProinflammatory pathwaysDiet high
2014
Systemic and tumor level iron regulation in men with colorectal cancer: a case control study
Pusatcioglu CK, Nemeth E, Fantuzzi G, Llor X, Freels S, Tussing-Humphreys L, Cabay RJ, Linzmeier R, Ng D, Clark J, Braunschweig C. Systemic and tumor level iron regulation in men with colorectal cancer: a case control study. Nutrition & Metabolism 2014, 11: 21. PMID: 24872837, PMCID: PMC4037273, DOI: 10.1186/1743-7075-11-21.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchDietary iron intakeLow iron statusIron statusSerum hepcidinIron intakeColonic tissueHigher markersNormal rangeIron exposureIron stainingIron accumulationPerls' iron stainingColorectal cancer riskSerum hepcidin concentrationsHealthy control subjectsRole of hepcidinCase-control studyHigher serum hepcidinSystemic iron statusDuodenal iron absorptionFuture clinical studiesCRC subjectsInflammatory markersMedication useCRC cases
2012
Seeking genetic susceptibility variants for colorectal cancer: the EPICOLON consortium experience
Castellví-Bel S, Ruiz-Ponte C, Fernández-Rozadilla C, Abulí A, Muñoz J, Bessa X, Brea-Fernández A, Ferro M, Giráldez MD, Xicola RM, Llor X, Jover R, Piqué JM, Andreu M, Castells A, Carracedo A, Association F. Seeking genetic susceptibility variants for colorectal cancer: the EPICOLON consortium experience. Mutagenesis 2012, 27: 153-159. PMID: 22294762, DOI: 10.1093/mutage/ger047.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPopulation-based colorectal cancer casesColorectal cancer casesExtensive clinical dataWhole-exome sequencingOncology GroupMulticentre studyColorectal cancerCRC casesControl subjectsFamilial CRCLynch syndromeCRC samplesCancer casesClinical dataFamilial historyCRC familiesGenetic susceptibility variantsCancerGenetic variantsPhase 1Pathways WntCandidate gene approachConsortium experienceSusceptibility variantsGenome-wide association studies
2011
A two-phase case–control study for colorectal cancer genetic susceptibility: candidate genes from chromosomal regions 9q22 and 3q22
Abulí A, Fernández-Rozadilla C, Giráldez MD, Muñoz J, Gonzalo V, Bessa X, Bujanda L, Reñé JM, Lanas A, García AM, Saló J, Argüello L, Vilella À, Carreño R, Jover R, Xicola RM, Llor X, Carvajal-Carmona L, Tomlinson IP, Kerr DJ, Houlston RS, Piqué JM, Carracedo A, Castells A, Andreu M, Ruiz-Ponte C, Castellví-Bel S, for the Gastrointestinal Oncology Group of the Spanish Gastroenterological Association. A two-phase case–control study for colorectal cancer genetic susceptibility: candidate genes from chromosomal regions 9q22 and 3q22. British Journal Of Cancer 2011, 105: 870-875. PMID: 21811255, PMCID: PMC3171011, DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2011.296.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedAntigens, CDCarrier ProteinsCase-Control StudiesChromosomes, Human, Pair 3Chromosomes, Human, Pair 9Colorectal NeoplasmsDNA-Binding ProteinsGenetic Association StudiesGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGPI-Linked ProteinsHumansMaleNuclear ProteinsPolymorphism, Single NucleotideSemaphorinsConceptsCRC riskCRC casesColorectal cancerSingle nucleotide polymorphismsCancer-related deathCase-control studyLarge CRC cohortsGenetic variantsLow-penetrance genetic variantsCRC cohortCRC susceptibilityCRC familiesSecond causeGenetic susceptibilityGenetic riskGenetic linkage studiesAdditional associationsCandidate genesRiskPhase 2Plausible candidate genesFurther validationPhase 1Two-phase case-control studyLinkage studies