David Pee
University of Pennsylvania
6 Papers
10 Citations
David Pee is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Menopause. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
On Combining Data From Genome-Wide Association Studies to Discover Disease-Associated SNPs
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared several procedures to combine GWA study data both in terms of the power to detect a disease-associated SNP while controlling the genome-wide significance level, and the detection probability ($\mathit{DP}$).
12
Breast Cancer Relative Hazard Estimates From Case-Control and Cohort Designs With Missing Data on Mammographic Density
Jinbo Chen,Rajeev Ayyagari,Nilanjan Chatterjee,David Pee,Catherine Schairer,Celia Byrne,Jacques Benichou,Mitchell H. Gail +7 more
TL;DR: Data from the Breast Cancer Detection Demonstration Project was analyzed to obtain multivariate relative hazard models for breast cancer that included mammographic density (MD) in addition to standard risk factors and it was shown that this method was substantially more efficient than a previously proposed weighted-likelihood method.
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Early menopause in long-term survivors of cancer during adolescence
Julianne Byrne,Thomas R. Fears,Mitchell H. Gail,David Pee,Roger R. Connelly,Donald F. Austin,Grace F. Holmes,Frederick F. Holmes,Howard B. Latourette,J. Wister Meigs,Louise C. Strong,Max H. Myers,John J. Mulvihill +12 more
TL;DR: Treatment for cancer during adolescence carries a substantial risk for early menopause among women still menstruating at age 21, and increasing use of radiation and chemotherapy suggests that these women should be made aware of their smaller window of fertility so that they can plan their families accordingly.
Early menopause in long-term survivors of cancer during adolescence
Julianne Byrne,Thomas R. Fears,Mitchell H. Gail,David Pee,Roger R. Connelly,Donald F. Austin,Grace F. Holmes,Frederick F. Holmes,Howard B. Latourette,J.W. Meigs,Louise C. Strong,Max H. Myers,John J. Mulvihill +12 more
TL;DR: Treatment for cancer during adolescence carries a substantial risk for early menopause among women still menstruating at age 21, and increasing use of radiation and chemotherapy suggests that these women should be made aware of their smaller window of fertility so that they can plan their families accordingly.
On Combining Data From Genome-Wide Association Studies to Discover Disease-Associated SNPs
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared several procedures to combine GWA study data both in terms of the power to detect a disease-associated SNP while controlling the genome-wide significance level, and the detection probability (DP).