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    • An immune-inflammation gene expression signature in prostate tumors of smokers 

      Prueitt, R. L.; Wallace, T. A.; Glynn, S. A.; Yi, M.; Tang, W.; Luo, J.; Dorsey, T. H.; Stagliano, K. E.; Gillespie, J. W.; Hudson, R. S.; Terunuma, A.; Shoe, J. L.; Haines, D. C.; Yfantis, H. G.; Han, M.; Martin, D. N.; Jordan, S. V.; Borin, J. F.; Naslund, M. J.; Alexander, R. B.; Stephens, R. M.; Loffredo, C. A.; Lee, D. H.; Putluri, N.; Sreekumar, A.; Hurwitz, A. A.; Ambs, S. (American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2015-12-30)
      Smokers develop metastatic prostate cancer more frequently than nonsmokers, suggesting that a tobacco-derived factor is driving metastatic progression. To identify smoking-induced alterations in human prostate cancer, we ...