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D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
101
Citations
27738
World Ranking
1477
National Ranking
841

Overview

Fred F. Kadlubar is affiliated with the United States Food and Drug Administration in the United States. Their research contributions include work published in academic and institutional venues, focusing on topics relevant to biotechnology and occupational health.

Their recent publication is:

  • Applying New Biotechnologies to the Study of Occupational Cancer? A Workshop Summary, 2020, UNC Libraries

Frequent co-authors collaborating with Fred F. Kadlubar include:

  • Mark Toraason
  • Richard J. Albertini
  • Steven Bayard
  • William L. Bigbee
  • Aaron Blair

Work by Fred F. Kadlubar has appeared predominantly in the following publication venue:

  • UNC Libraries

Best Publications

  • Determination of CYP1A2 and NAT2 phenotypes in human populations by analysis of caffeine urinary metabolites.

    M A Butler;N P Lang;J F Young;N E Caporaso

  • Metabolic activation of carcinogenic heterocyclic aromatic amines by human liver and colon

    Robert J. Turesky;Nicholas P. Lang;Mary Ann Butler;Candee H. Teitel

  • Hepatic microsomal N-glucuronidation and nucleic acid binding of N-hydroxy arylamines in relation to urinary bladder carcinogenesis.

    Fred F. Kadlubar;James A. Miller;Elizabeth C. Miller

  • Association of genetic variation in tamoxifen-metabolizing enzymes with overall survival and recurrence of disease in breast cancer patients.

    Susan A. Nowell;Jiyoung Ahn;James M. Rae;Joshua O. Scheys

  • p53 Genotypes and Haplotypes Associated With Lung Cancer Susceptibility and Ethnicity

    Xifeng Wu;Hua Zhao;Christopher I. Amos;Sanjay Shete

  • Identification of Functional Genetic Variants in Cyclooxygenase-2 and Their Association With Risk of Esophageal Cancer

    Xuemei Zhang;Xuemei Zhang;Xiaoping Miao;Wen Tan;Baitang Ning

  • Genetically based N -acetyltransferase metabolic polymorphism and low-level environmental exposure to carcinogens

    Paolo Vineis;Helmut Bartsch;Neil Caporaso;Anita M. Harrington

  • Effect of polymorphism in the human glutathione S-transferase A1 promoter on hepatic GSTA1 and GSTA2 expression.

    Brian F. Coles;Fabrice Morel;Claudine Rauch;Wolfgang W. Huber

  • N- and O-acetylation of aromatic and heterocyclic amine carcinogens by human monomorphic and polymorphic acetyltransferases expressed in COS-1 cells

    R.F. Minchin;P.T. Reeves;C.H. Teitel;M.E. Mcmanus

  • Formation and persistence of arylamine DNA adducts in vivo.

    Frederick A. Beland;Fred F. Kadlubar

  • Genetic Polymorphisms in Catechol-O-Methyltransferase, Menopausal Status, and Breast Cancer Risk

    Patricia A. Thompson;Peter G. Shields;Jo L. Freudenheim;Angie Stone

  • Purification and characterization of six cytochrome P-450 isozymes from human liver microsomes.

    Wang Pp;Beaune P;Kaminsky Ls;Dannan Ga

  • Role of aromatic amine acetyltransferase in human colorectal cancer.

    Nicholas P. Lang;David Z. J. Chu;Carolyn F. Hunter;Donald C. Kendall

  • Pan-Fried Meat Containing High Levels of Heterocyclic Aromatic Amines but Low Levels of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Induces Cytochrome P4501A2 Activity in Humans

    Rashmi Sinha;Nathaniel Rothman;Ellen D. Brown;Steven D. Mark

  • Arylamine-DNA adducts in vitro and in vivo: their role in bacterial mutagenesis and urinary bladder carcinogenesis.

    Frederick A. Beland;David T. Beranek;Kenneth L. Dooley;Robert H. Heflich

  • Increased transcriptional activity of the CYP3A4*1B promoter variant

    B. Amirimani;B. Ning;A.C. Deitz;B.L. Weber

  • Role of Aromatic Amine Acetyltransferases, NAT1 and NAT2, in Carcinogen-DNA Adduct Formation in the Human Urinary Bladder

    Alaa F. Badawi;Ari Hirvonen;Douglas A. Bell;Nicholas P. Lang

  • Impact of Genetic Polymorphisms in Cytochrome P450 2E1 and Glutathione S-Transferases M1, T1, and P1 on Susceptibility to Esophageal Cancer among High-Risk Individuals in China

    Wen Tan;Nan Song;Gui Qi Wang;Qing Liu

  • Human alpha class glutathione S-transferases: genetic polymorphism, expression, and susceptibility to disease.

    Brian F Coles;Fred F Kadlubar

  • Susceptibility to esophageal cancer and genetic polymorphisms in glutathione S-transferases T1, P1, and M1 and cytochrome P450 2E1

    Dong-Xin Lin;Yong-Ming Tang;Qiong Peng;Shi-Xin Lu

Frequent Co-Authors

Frederick A. Beland
Frederick A. Beland National Center for Toxicological Research
Christine B. Ambrosone
Christine B. Ambrosone Roswell Park Cancer Institute
Helmut Bartsch
Helmut Bartsch German Cancer Research Center
Dongxin Lin
Dongxin Lin Chinese Academy of Sciences
James A. Miller
James A. Miller University of Wisconsin–Madison
Paolo Vineis
Paolo Vineis Imperial College London
Elizabeth C. Miller
Elizabeth C. Miller University of Wisconsin–Madison
Neil E. Caporaso
Neil E. Caporaso National Institutes of Health
Douglas A. Bell
Douglas A. Bell National Institutes of Health

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