Anne Tjønneland
University of Copenhagen
1511 Papers
8K Citations
Anne Tjønneland is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 139, co-authored 1345 publications. Previous affiliations of Anne Tjønneland include Maastricht University & National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.
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Papers
Micronutrient intake and breast cancer characteristics among postmenopausal women.
TL;DR: No effect of micronutrients on overall risk of postmenopausal breast cancer is found, but possible effects of micronsutrients in subgroups of breast cancer are indicated, with a potential beneficial effect of dietary β-carotene in lobular breast cancer and dietary vitamin E in ER+PGR+breast cancer and a potential harmful effect of Dietary folate in ER-PGR- breast cancer.
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Adipose organochlorine concentrations and risk of breast cancer among postmenopausal Danish women.
Ole Raaschou-Nielsen,Marian Pavuk,A. Leblanc,P. Dumas,Jean Philippe Weber,Anja Olsen,Anne Tjønneland,Kim Overvad,J. Olsen +8 more
TL;DR: The results do not support that higher organochlorine body levels increase the risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women and the interpretation of the inverse association for estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer is currently unclear.
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A U-shaped association between consumption of marine n-3 fatty acids and development of atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter—a Danish cohort study
Thomas Andersen Rix,Albert Marni Joensen,Sam Riahi,Søren Lundbye-Christensen,Anne Tjønneland,Erik Berg Schmidt,Kim Overvad +6 more
TL;DR: A U-shaped association between consumption of marine n-3 PUFA and risk of incident atrial fibrillation was found, with the lowest risk close to the median intake of total marine n/a PUFA at a moderate intake of 0.63 g/day.
Haplotypes of the estrogen receptor beta gene and breast cancer risk.
David G. Cox,Philip Bretsky,Peter Kraft,Paul D.P. Pharoah,Demetrius Albanes,David Altshuler,Pilar Amiano,Göran Berglund,Heiner Boeing,Julie E. Buring,Noël P. Burtt,Eugenia E. Calle,Federico Canzian,Stephen J. Chanock,Françoise Clavel-Chapelon,Graham A. Colditz,Heather Spencer Feigelson,Christopher A. Haiman,Susan E. Hankinson,Joel N. Hirschhorn,Brian E. Henderson,Robert N. Hoover,David J. Hunter,Rudolf Kaaks,Laurence N. Kolonel,Loic LeMarchand,Eiliv Lund,Domenico Palli,Petra H.M. Peeters,Malcolm Cecil Pike,Elio Riboli,Daniel O. Stram,Michael J. Thun,Anne Tjønneland,Ruth C. Travis,Dimitrios Trichopoulos,Meredith Yeager +36 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that inherited variants in ESR2 (while possibly conferring a small increased risk of breast cancer) are not associated with appreciable changes in breast cancer risk among Caucasian women.
Anorexia nervosa and cancer risk.
Lene Mellemkjær,Charlotte Emborg,Gloria Gridley,Povl Munk-Jørgensen,Christoffer Johansen,Anne Tjønneland,Susanne K. Kjaer,Jørgen H. Olsen +7 more
TL;DR: The finding of a slight reduction in cancer risk among women with anorexia nervosa may support the theory that a low-energy diet may decrease tumor development in humans, but longer follow-up and control for confounding factors are needed.
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