Christina M Nagle

No ORCID on file · 10 papers in corpus · active 2007-2021

Study types

  • article 5
  • other 4
  • journal-article 1

Condition tags

  • endometriosis 9
  • dysmenorrhea 1
article 2021
·doi:10.17615/zn9f-0969

Endometriosis is a risk factor for epithelial ovarian cancer; however, whether this risk extends to all invasive histological subtypes or borderline tumours is not clear. We undertook an international collaborative study to assess the assoc…

other 2018
International journal of epidemiology ·doi:10.1093/ije/dyx252

BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer incidence differs substantially by race/ethnicity, but the reasons for this are not well understood. Data were pooled from the African American Cancer Epidemiology Study (AACES) and 11 case-control studies in the …

other 2012
The Lancet. Oncology ·doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(11)70404-1

BACKGROUND: Endometriosis is a risk factor for epithelial ovarian cancer; however, whether this risk extends to all invasive histological subtypes or borderline tumours is not clear. We undertook an international collaborative study to asse…

journal-article 2012
The Lancet. Oncology ·doi:10.1016/s1470-2045(11)70404-1
other 2011
Gynecologic oncology ·doi:10.1016/j.ygyno.2011.08.022

OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between gynecological conditions (including uterine fibroids, endometriosis, pelvic inflammatory disease and infections of the tubes/womb), and risk of endometrial cancer overall and by histological sub…

article 2009
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology ·doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2009.10.857
other 2008
European journal of cancer (Oxford, England : 1990) ·doi:10.1016/j.ejca.2008.07.009

Endometrioid and clear cell subtypes of ovarian cancer are both known to be closely associated with endometriosis and endometrial pathology, and so have often been combined in studies of causation. We have examined these ovarian cancers sep…

article 2008
·doi:10.1677/erc-08-0075

In 1998, Risch proposed a hypothesis for the pathogenesis of ovarian cancer relating to the role of androgens in stimulating epithelial cell proliferation. Although this hypothesis has been widely discussed, direct evidence to support it is…

article 2007

B113 PURPOSE: Epidemiological evidence suggests that endometriosis and other endometrial pathologies increase risk of ovarian cancer but that this increased risk is related almost exclusively to the clear cell and endometrioid subtypes of o…

article 2007
International journal of cancer ·doi:10.1002/ijc.23017

Chronic inflammation has been proposed as the possible causal mechanism that explains the observed association between certain risk factors, such as the use of talcum powder (talc) in the pelvic region and epithelial ovarian cancer. To addr…