Regina Kroiss
Medical University of Vienna
11 Papers
45 Citations
Regina Kroiss is an academic researcher from Medical University of Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 11 publications.
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Papers
•Journal Article
Contributions of ATM mutations to familial breast and ovarian cancer.
Yvonne R. Thorstenson,Adriane Roxas,Regina Kroiss,Mark A. Jenkins,Kristine M. Yu,Thomas Bachrich,Daniela Muhr,Tierney L. Wayne,Gilbert Chu,Ronald W. Davis,Teresa Wagner,Peter J. Oefner +11 more
TL;DR: There is a significant prevalence of ATM mutations in breast and ovarian cancer families and adds to a growing body of evidence that ATM mutations confer increased susceptibility to breast cancer.
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Intratumoral IGF-I protein expression is selectively upregulated in breast cancer patients with BRCA1/2 mutations.
Gernot Hudelist,T Wagner,Marsha Rich Rosner,Anneliese Fink-Retter,Daphne Gschwantler-Kaulich,Klaus Czerwenka,Regina Kroiss,Muy-Kheng Tea,K. Pischinger,Wolfgang J. Köstler,Johannes Attems,R Mueller,C Blaukopf,Ernst Kubista,Markus Hengstschläger,Christian F. Singer +15 more
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of BRCA mutations on intracellular IGF-I protein expression was detected in tumoral epithelium and surrounding stroma, and was significantly upregulated in tumors of mutation carriers when compared with matched sporadic tumors.
Younger birth cohort correlates with higher breast and ovarian cancer risk in European BRCA1 mutation carriers
Regina Kroiss,Verena Winkler,D. Bikas,Elisabeth Fleischmann,Claudia Mainau,Florian Frommlet,Daniela Muhr,Christine Fuerhauser,Maria Tea,Barbara Bittner,Ernst Kubista,Peter J. Oefner,Peter Bauer,T Wagner +13 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that female BRCA1 mutation carriers should be counseled about their cohort‐dependent cancer risk, and further research into variables that affect cancer risk and are amenable to modification should be considered a priority.
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Central European BRCA2 mutation carriers: birth cohort status correlates with onset of breast cancer.
Muy-Kheng Tea,Regina Kroiss,Daniela Muhr,Christine Fuerhauser-Rappaport,Peter J. Oefner,Teresa Wagner,Christian F. Singer +6 more
TL;DR: The age cohort-dependent early onset in BC in women born after 1958 strongly suggests the importance of exogenous factors such as lifestyle modification while this does not seem to be the case for OC.
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Impact of lifestyle factors on preneoplastic changes in prophylactic oophorectomies of BRCA mutation carriers.
Helga Primas,Regina Kroiss,Karin Kalteis,Christine Rappaport,Daniela Muhr,Christian Primas,Ernst Kubista,Reinhard Horvat,Peter J. Oefner,Christian F. Singer +9 more
TL;DR: To improve the final outcome of the disease, women at increased risk of ovarian cancer should be appropriately informed of potential increased risk factors.
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