Christine M. Friedenreich
Alberta Health Services
425 Papers
1.4K Citations
Christine M. Friedenreich is an academic researcher from Alberta Health Services. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 383 publications. Previous affiliations of Christine M. Friedenreich include University of Ottawa & University of Toronto.
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Papers
The effects of shift work and sleep duration on cancer incidence in Alberta`s Tomorrow Project cohort.
Jessica McNeil,Emily Heer,Romy F. Willemsen,Christine M. Friedenreich,Darren R. Brenner,Darren R. Brenner +5 more
TL;DR: A consistent association between shift work employment and lung cancer risk was noted in this Canadian sample, and some evidence of effect modification of the rotating shift work-lung cancer risk association by sleep duration was noted.
Control group design, contamination and drop-out in exercise oncology trials: a systematic review.
Charlotte N. Steins Bisschop,Kerry S. Courneya,Miranda J. Velthuis,Evelyn M. Monninkhof,Lee W. Jones,Christine M. Friedenreich,Elsken van der Wall,Petra H.M. Peeters,Anne M. May +8 more
TL;DR: Control groups receiving an intervention during and after the study intervention period have lower contamination and drop-out rates than control groups offered an intervention after the intervention period.
Case–control study of lifetime total physical activity and endometrial cancer risk
Christine M. Friedenreich,Christine M. Friedenreich,Linda S. Cook,Linda S. Cook,Linda S. Cook,Anthony M. Magliocco,Máire A. Duggan,Kerry S. Courneya +7 more
TL;DR: Evidence is provided for a decreased risk between lifetime physical activity and endometrial cancer risk and a possible increased risk associated with sedentary behavior.
A randomized trial of exercise and quality of life in colorectal cancer survivors.
Kerry S. Courneya,Christine M. Friedenreich,H. A. Quinney,Anthony Fields,Lee W. Jones,Adrian Fairey +5 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that increased cardiovascular fitness is associated with improvements in QOL in colorectal cancer survivors but better controlled trials are needed.
Predictors of adherence to different types and doses of supervised exercise during breast cancer chemotherapy.
Kerry S. Courneya,Roanne J. Segal,Roanne J. Segal,Karen A. Gelmon,John R. Mackey,John R. Mackey,Christine M. Friedenreich,Yutaka Yasui,Robert D. Reid,Carolyn Proulx,Linda Trinh,Lianne B. Dolan,Evyanne Wooding,Evyanne Wooding,James R. Vallerand,Donald C. McKenzie +15 more
TL;DR: Determinants of exercise adherence in breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy are multidisciplinary and may vary by the exercise prescription.