Risk factors for head and neck cancer in more and less developed countries: Analysis from the INHANCE consortium.
Neerav GoyalMax HennessyErik LehmanWenxue LinAntonio AgudoWolfgang AhrensStefania BocciaPaul BrennanHermann BrennerGabriella CadoniCristina CanovaChu ChenDavid ConwayMaria Paula CuradoLuigino Dal MasoAlexander W DaudtValeria EdefontiEleonora FabianovaLeticia FernandezSilvia FranceschiWerner GaravelloMaura GillisonRichard B HayesClaire HealyRolando HerreroIvana HolcatovaJossy L KandaKarl KelseyBo T HansenRosalina KoifmanPagona LagiouCarlo La VecchiaFabio LeviGuojun LiJolanta LissowskaRossana Mendoza LópezDanièle LuceGary MacfarlaneDana MatesKeitaro MatsuoMichael McCleanAna MenezesGwenn MenvielleHal MorgensternKirsten MoysichEva NegriAndrew F OlshanTamas PandicsJerry PoleselMark PurdueLoredana RadoiHeribert RamrothLorenzo RichiardiStimson SchantzStephen M SchwartzDiego SerrainoOxana ShanginaElaine SmithErich M SturgisBeata ŚwiątkowskaPeter ThomsonThomas L VaughanMarta VilenskyDeborah M WinnVictor Wunsch-FilhoGuo-Pei YuJose P ZevallosZuo-Feng ZhangTongzhang ZhengAriana ZnaorPaolo BoffettaMia HashibeYuan-Chin A LeeJoshua E MuscatPublished in: Oral diseases (2022)
These findings suggest the degree of industrialization and economic development affects the relationship between smoking and alcohol with head and neck cancer.
Keyphrases