Epidemiologist Erin Bowles, MPH, is looking at breast cancer screening and treatment from many different perspectives. Her research brings new insight into cancer risk factors, diagnosis, treatment, and survivorship, while helping improve cancer care for patients and families.
Erin received an R50 mid-career research award from the National Cancer Institute (NCI). This award is given to cancer researchers who have demonstrated successes and contributions to cancer research as a non-principal investigator. As a key member of 2 large cancer collaborations — the NCI's Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium and the Kaiser Permanente Breast Cancer Survivors Cohort — Erin has developed diverse expertise that includes reading mammograms for breast density and using administrative data to understand patterns of breast cancer screening and cancer treatment.
Her current work includes:
Erin’s experience working with large observational cohorts and collaborations with numerous study teams over the past 20+ years has provided her with expertise in data collection and quality control for many subject areas. She is also Director of the Collaborative Science Division at KPWHRI, providing leadership, supervision, mentorship, and support to collaborative scientists with a range of skills and expertise. She is passionate about providing long-term career paths for masters- and PhD-level scientists who don’t want to become independent investigators.
Breast cancer; colorectal cancer; multiple myeloma; thyroid cancer; pancreatic cancer; biostatistics; epidemiology; mammography; mammographic breast density; cancer treatment; cancer screening and surveillance; automated data collection; quality of care; medication use; care coordination; administrative data
Access to care; health disparities; health outcomes research; quality of life; measurement of change in health care systems; practice variation
Menopause; hormone replacement therapy (HRT); breast cancer
Cognitive health and dementia; biostatistics; epidemiology; medication use; cancer
Pharmacoepidemiology; observational study research methods; chemotherapy; radiation exposure
Sprague BL, Trentham-Dietz A, Gangnon RE, Buist DS, Burnside ES, Aiello Bowles EJ, Stanczyk FZ, Sisney GS. Circulating sex hormones and mammographic breast density among postmenopausal women. Horm Cancer. 2011;2(1):62-72. PubMed
Carney PA, Geller BM, Sickles EA, Miglioretti DL, Aiello Bowles EJ, Abraham L, Feig SA, Brown D, Cook AJ, Yankaskas BC, Elmore JG. Feasibility and satisfaction with a tailored web-based audit intervention for recalibrating radiologists' thresholds for conducting additional work-up. Acad Radiol. 2011 Mar;18(3):369-76. Epub 2010 Dec 30. PubMed
Wagner EH, Aiello Bowles EJ, Tuzzio L, Wiese CJ, Kirlin B, Greene SM, Clauser SB. The quality of cancer patient experience: perspectives of patients, family members, providers, and experts. Qual Saf Health Care. 2010 Dec;19(6):484-9. PubMed
Feigelson H, Bischoff K, Bowles E, Engel J, James T, Onitilo A, Single R, Williams A, Wagner E, McCahill L. PS2-24: improving breast cancer surgery quality through a collaborative surgical database. Clin Med Res. 2010;8(3-4):180. PubMed
Horner K, Wagner E, Bowles EA, Kirlin B, Tuzzio L. PS3-29: the benefits of stakeholder involvement in research. Clin Med Res. 2010;8(3-4):201. PubMed
Onega T, Aiello Bowles EJ, Miglioretti DL, Carney PA, Geller BM, Yankaskas BC, Kerlikowske K, Sickles EA, Elmore JG. Radiologists' perceptions of computer aided detection versus double reading for mammography interpretation. Acad Radiol. 2010;17(10):1217-26. PubMed
New study will develop risk models to improve clinical guidelines and practice.
Kaiser Permanente Washington has been part of the national Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium since 1994. Learn about the Kaiser Permanente Washington Breast Cancer Surveillance Registry here.
The division contributes to research across the institute with methodological and subject matter expertise.
MedPage Today, March 4, 2025
How KPWHRI is contributing to better cancer screening and better outcomes for patients.