A
Asif Muneer
Researcher at University College Hospital
Publications - 206
Citations - 2696
Asif Muneer is an academic researcher from University College Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Penile cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 172 publications receiving 1928 citations. Previous affiliations of Asif Muneer include University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust & National Institute for Health Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Conservative Surgery for Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Penis: Resection Margins and Long-Term Oncological Control
Prodromos Philippou,Majid Shabbir,Peter Malone,Raj Nigam,Asif Muneer,David Ralph,Suks Minhas +6 more
TL;DR: Penile conserving surgery is oncologically safe and a surgical excision margin of less than 5 mm is adequate and higher local recurrence rates are associated with lymphovascular invasion, and higher tumor stage and grade.
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Glans Resurfacing for the Treatment of Carcinoma In Situ of the Penis: Surgical Technique and Outcomes
Majid Shabbir,Asif Muneer,Jas Kalsi,Chitranjan J. Shukla,Evangelos Zacharakis,Giulio Garaffa,David Ralph,Suks Minhas +7 more
TL;DR: Glans resurfacing is a safe and effective primary treatment for CIS of the glans penis and maintains a functional penis without compromising oncologic control, while ensuring that definitive histopathlogy is obtained.
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Testicular and paratesticular tumours in the prepubertal population
TL;DR: This work provides an up-to-date and comprehensive review of the clinical presentation, imaging, pathology, and clinical management of prepubertal paratesticular and testicular tumours.
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British Society for Sexual Medicine Guidelines on Adult Testosterone Deficiency, With Statements for UK Practice.
Geoffrey Hackett,Mike Kirby,David Edwards,Thomas Hugh Jones,Kevan Wylie,Nick Ossei-Gerning,Janine David,Asif Muneer +7 more
TL;DR: Improving the diagnosis and management of TD in adult men should provide somatic, sexual, and psychological benefits and subsequent improvements in quality of life.
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Long-term trends in incidence, survival and mortality of primary penile cancer in England.
Manit Arya,Manit Arya,Ruoran Li,Kat Pegler,Vijay K. Sangar,John D. Kelly,Suks Minhas,Asif Muneer,Michel P Coleman +8 more
TL;DR: The 21 % increase in penile cancer incidence in England since the 1970s may be explained by changes in sexual practice, greater exposure to sexually transmitted oncogenic human papilloma viruses, and decreasing rates of childhood circumcision.