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Gerardo Fernandez

Researcher at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Publications -  56
Citations -  1422

Gerardo Fernandez is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prostate cancer & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 56 publications receiving 1200 citations. Previous affiliations of Gerardo Fernandez include New York University & National Scientific and Technical Research Council.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neoangiogenesis and sinusoidal "capillarization" in dysplastic nodules of the liver.

TL;DR: Findings showed that distributions of sinusoidal capillarization and unpaired arteries in dysplastic nodules are intermediate between those in cirrhotic nodules and HCC, supporting dysplastics nodules as premalignant lesions, and unpaired arteries are histologically useful for distinguishing dyspl Plastic nodules from large cirrhosis nodules.
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Systems Pathology Approach for the Prediction of Prostate Cancer Progression After Radical Prostatectomy

TL;DR: The integration of clinicopathologic variables with imaging and biomarker data (systems pathology) resulted in a highly accurate tool for predicting CF within 5 years after prostatectomy and the data support a role for AR signaling in clinical progression and duration of response to ADT.
Patent

Systems and methods for treating, diagnosing and predicting the occurrence of a medical condition

TL;DR: In this paper, a model predicts risk of prostate cancer progression in a patient, where the model is based on features including one or more (e.g., all) of preoperative PSA, dominant Gleason Grade, Gleason Score, at least one of a measurement of expression of AR in epithelial and stromal nuclei, a morphometric measurement of average edge length in the minimum spanning tree (MST) of epithelial nuclei and area of non-lumen associated epithelial cells relative to total tumor area.
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Angiogenesis during mandibular distraction osteogenesis.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated for the first time that an intense vascular response associated with mandibular DO occurs primarily during the early stages of distraction, and it is hypothesized that as distraction continues, newly formed vessels likely undergo consolidation, thus forming more mature vessels capable of withstanding distraction forces.