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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Long Non-Coding Rnas As Prognostic Markers In Human Breast Cancer, Hairong Liu, Juan Li, Pratirodh Koirala, Xianfeng Ding, Binghai Chen, Yiheng Wang, Zheng Wang, Chuanxin Wang, Xu Zhang, Yin-Yuan Mo Mar 2016

Long Non-Coding Rnas As Prognostic Markers In Human Breast Cancer, Hairong Liu, Juan Li, Pratirodh Koirala, Xianfeng Ding, Binghai Chen, Yiheng Wang, Zheng Wang, Chuanxin Wang, Xu Zhang, Yin-Yuan Mo

Faculty Publications

Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been recently shown to play an important role in gene regulation and normal cellular functions, and disease processes. However, despite the overwhelming number of lncRNAs identified to date, little is known about their role in cancer for vast majority of them. The present study aims to determine whether lncRNAs can serve as prognostic markers in human breast cancer. We interrogated the breast invasive carcinoma dataset of the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) at the cBioPortal consisting of ~ 1,000 cases. Among 2,730 lncRNAs analyzed, 577 lncRNAs had alterations ranging from 1% to 32% frequency, which include …


Patterns Of Information Behavior And Prostate Cancer Knowledge Among African-American Men, Levi Ross, Tyra Dark, Heather Orom, Willie Underwood Iii, Charkarra T. Anderson-Lewis, Jarrett Johnson, Deborah O. Erwin Dec 2011

Patterns Of Information Behavior And Prostate Cancer Knowledge Among African-American Men, Levi Ross, Tyra Dark, Heather Orom, Willie Underwood Iii, Charkarra T. Anderson-Lewis, Jarrett Johnson, Deborah O. Erwin

Faculty Publications

The purposes of this study are to explore cancer information acquisition patterns among African-American men and to evaluate relationships between information acquisition patterns and prostate cancer prevention and control knowledge. A random sample of 268 men participated in a statewide interviewer-administered, telephone survey. Men classified as non-seekers, non-medical source seekers, and medical source seekers of prostate cancer information differed on household income, level of education, and beliefs about personal risk for developing prostate cancer. Results from multiple regression analysis indicated that age, education, and information-seeking status were associated with overall levels of prostate cancer knowledge. Results from logistic regression analyses …