Return to search

Cohorts and Consortia Conference: A Summary Report (Banff, Canada, June 17-19, 2009)

Epidemiologic studies have adapted to the genomics era by forming large international consortia to overcome issues of large data volume and small sample size. Whereas both cohort and well-conducted case-control studies can inform disease risk from genetic susceptibility, cohort studies offer the additional advantages of assessing lifestyle and environmental exposure-disease time sequences often over a life course. Consortium involvement poses several logistical and ethical issues to investigators, some of which are unique to cohort studies, including the challenge to harmonize prospectively collected lifestyle and environmental exposures validly across individual studies. An open forum to discuss the opportunities and challenges of large-scale cohorts and their consortia was held in June 2009 in Banff, Canada, and is summarized in this report.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ETSU/oai:dc.etsu.edu:etsu-works-17747
Date01 March 2011
CreatorsBoffetta, Paolo, Colditz, Graham A., Potter, John D., Kolonel, Laurence, Robson, Paula J., Malekzadeh, Reza, Seminara, Daniela, Goode, Ellen L., Yoo, Keun Young, Demers, Paul, Gallagher, Richard, Prentice, Ross, Yasui, Yutaka, O'Doherty, Kieran, Petersen, Gloria M., Ulrich, Cornelia M., Csizmadi, Ilona, Amankwah, Ernest K., Brockton, Nigel T., Kopciuk, Karen, McGregor, S. Elizabeth, Kelemen, Linda E.
PublisherDigital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
Source SetsEast Tennessee State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
SourceETSU Faculty Works

Page generated in 0.0027 seconds