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外文期刊>Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
>Homogeneity in Case/Control Numbers and North Indian Caste Criteria in Cervical Cancer/Female Urology Genetic-Studies at a Premier Medical Research Institute in Lucknow, India
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Homogeneity in Case/Control Numbers and North Indian Caste Criteria in Cervical Cancer/Female Urology Genetic-Studies at a Premier Medical Research Institute in Lucknow, India
Cervical cancer has emerged as a major public health problem in Lucknow and New York in the century. Cancer genetic studies are essential to identify/stratify disease-susceptible individuals in a population-based cohort. Sample size homogeneity and North Indian caste in female urology genetic-studies are significant issues in meaningful interpretation of data. A review of scientific literature using Pubmed database was conducted, including an assessment of cervical cancer genetic studies conducted as part of the author's doctoral dissertation at a premier Lucknow-based medical research Institute. Sample size numbers and caste criteria in the North Indian cohort ( subjects) were evaluated with homogeneity in the sample cohort data set(s). Subgroup caste-stratification of North Indian cohort is equally essential, for instance, Brahmin (e.g. Pandey), Vaishya (e.g. Mittal), Rajput (e.g. Singh) and Kshudra (e.g. Yadav) during the conception and design of genetics-based studies. Sample size homogeneity in histopathologically confirmed case and control numbers and caste-based stratification in a North Indian cohort is essential in single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) studies in cervical cancer susceptible populations to draw more definitive conclusions.
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