Rebecca Landy
Queen Mary University of London
61 Papers
83 Citations
Rebecca Landy is an academic researcher from Queen Mary University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cervical cancer. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 49 publications. Previous affiliations of Rebecca Landy include Peking Union Medical College & University College London.
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Papers
HLA-dependent autoantibodies against post-translationally modified collagen type II in type 1 diabetes mellitus
Rocky Strollo,Rocky Strollo,Paola Rizzo,Paola Rizzo,Marialuisa Spoletini,Rebecca Landy,Chris Hughes,Frederique Ponchel,Nicola Napoli,Andrea Palermo,Raffaella Buzzetti,Paolo Pozzilli,Paolo Pozzilli,Ahuva Nissim +13 more
TL;DR: Hyperglycaemia and oxidative stress may trigger genetically controlled autoimmunity to ROS-CII and may explain the association between type 1 diabetes mellitus and RA.
Who in Europe Works beyond the State Pension Age and under which Conditions? Results from SHARE
TL;DR: Empirical evidence is delivered that paid employment beyond age 65 is more common among self-employed workers throughout Europe, in advantaged occupations and under-favourable psychosocial circumstances, and that this group of workers are in considerably good mental and physical health.
Cytology in the diagnosis of cervical cancer in symptomatic young women: a retrospective review
Anita W. W. Lim,Rebecca Landy,Alejandra Castanon,A. Hollingworth,Willie Hamilton,Nick Dudding,Peter Sasieni +6 more
TL;DR: Cytology has value beyond screening, and could be used as a diagnostic aid for earlier detection of cervical cancer in young women with gynaecological symptoms by ruling in urgent referral.
Challenges in risk estimation using routinely collected clinical data: The example of estimating cervical cancer risks from electronic health-records
Rebecca Landy,Li C. Cheung,Mark Schiffman,Julia C. Gage,Noorie Hyun,Nicolas Wentzensen,Walter Kinney,Philip E. Castle,Barbara Fetterman,Nancy E. Poitras,Thomas Lorey,Peter Sasieni,Hormuzd A. Katki +12 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that methods for right-censored data, such as Kaplan-Meier, result in biased estimates of disease risks when applied to interval- censoring data,such as screening programs using EHR data.
Are IQ and educational outcomes in teenagers related to their cannabis use? A prospective cohort study:
TL;DR: Investigation of associations between adolescent cannabis use and IQ and educational attainment in a sample of 2235 teenagers from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children suggests that Modest cannabis use in teenagers may have less cognitive impact than epidemiological surveys of older cohorts have previously suggested.