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Jason Chiang

Researcher at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Publications -  49
Citations -  751

Jason Chiang is an academic researcher from St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 32 publications receiving 397 citations. Previous affiliations of Jason Chiang include University of Pittsburgh.

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Tectal glioma harbors high rates of KRAS G12R and concomitant KRAS and BRAF alterations.

TL;DR: The presence of high rates of KRAS G12R and concomitant KRAS and BRAF alterations in TG suggests that the simultaneous activation and interaction of both pathways might play a significant role in the pathogenesis of TG.
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Infratentorial C11orf95-fused gliomas share histologic, immunophenotypic, and molecular characteristics of supratentorial RELA-fused ependymoma

TL;DR: The cytology and architecture varied among and within the same tumors, but a monotonous tumor cell population, cytoplasmic clearing, perivascular anucleate zones, and dystrophic microcalcifications were consistent features.
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Long-term visual acuity outcomes after radiation therapy for sporadic optic pathway glioma.

TL;DR: VA decline is most likely to occur within the first 2 years after RT and is not associated with radiographic progression of disease, highlighting the need for frequent ophthalmologic exams during this period.
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Risk stratification in pediatric low-grade glioma and glioneuronal tumor treated with radiation therapy: an integrated clinicopathologic and molecular analysis

TL;DR: A high-risk subgroup of patients, defined by diffuse astrocytoma histology or midbrain/thalamus tumor location, have suboptimal long-term survival and might benefit from timely use of RT.
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Neuropsychological outcomes of patients with low-grade glioma diagnosed during the first year of life

TL;DR: Performance below age expectations is revealed on measures of IQ, memory, reading, mathematics, and fine motor functioning as well as parent-report of attention, executive, and adaptive functioning of infants diagnosed with LGG in infancy.