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Ho Il Yoon

Researcher at Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

Publications -  207
Citations -  4517

Ho Il Yoon is an academic researcher from Seoul National University Bundang Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: COPD & Lung cancer. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 193 publications receiving 3576 citations. Previous affiliations of Ho Il Yoon include Seoul National University & New Generation University College.

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Genome-wide association analysis identifies new lung cancer susceptibility loci in never-smoking women in Asia.

Qing Lan, +133 more
- 01 Dec 2012 - 
TL;DR: It is observed that there is no evidence of association for lung cancer at 15q25 in never-smoking women in Asia, providing strong evidence that this locus is not associated with lung cancer independent of smoking.
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Analysis of heritability and shared heritability based on genome-wide association studies for thirteen cancer types

Joshua N. Sampson, +448 more
TL;DR: Correlation analysis indicates that the genetic architecture of lung cancer differs between a smoking population of European ancestry and a nonsmoking Asian population, allowing for the possibility that the Genetic etiology for the same disease can vary by population and environmental exposures.
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Clinical and molecular evidences of epithelial to mesenchymal transition in acquired resistance to EGFR-TKIs.

TL;DR: It is found that EMT developed in a lung cancer patient who had an acquired resistance to erlotinib while there were no known resistant mechanisms such as T790M and MET amplification.
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Characteristics, incidence, and risk factors of immune checkpoint inhibitor-related pneumonitis in patients with non-small cell lung cancer

TL;DR: ICI-related pneumonitis should be used with caution when treating lung cancer patients who have underlying chronic lung disease, especially interstitial lung disease.
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Clinical significance of a solitary ground-glass opacity (GGO) lesion of the lung detected by chest CT

TL;DR: A female sex and a spiculated mGGO border were found to be related with malignancy, suggesting that pulmonary infiltrate with eosinophilia (PIE) might have been responsible, and short-term follow-up by chest HRCT be conducted for m GGO lesions in the presence of high eos inophilia--regardless of lesion size.