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Jesse K. McKenney

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  93
Citations -  6793

Jesse K. McKenney is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carcinoma & Renal cell carcinoma. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 93 publications receiving 6073 citations. Previous affiliations of Jesse K. McKenney include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center & University of British Columbia.

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The International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) Vancouver classification of renal neoplasia

John R. Srigley, +134 more
TL;DR: The classification working group of the International Society of Urological Pathology consensus conference on renal neoplasia was in charge of making recommendations regarding additions and changes to the current World Health Organization Classification of Renal Tumors, with consensus that 5 entities should be recognized as new distinct epithelial tumors within the classification system.
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Ovarian serous tumors of low malignant potential (borderline tumors): outcome-based study of 276 patients with long-term (> or =5-year) follow-up.

TL;DR: The small, but significant risk of progression over time to low-grade serous carcinoma emphasizes the need for prolonged follow-up in patients with S-LMP and the need to stratified into clinically benign and malignant groups.

Rosai and Ackerman's surgical pathology /

TL;DR: Rosai and Ackerman's surgical pathology as mentioned in this paper, Rosai et al.'s surgical pathology, and the surgical pathology of the human body were discussed in the context of surgical pathology.
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DNA methylation profiling reveals novel biomarkers and important roles for DNA methyltransferases in prostate cancer

TL;DR: This study quantitatively profiled 95 primary prostate tumors and 86 benign adjacent prostate tissue samples for their DNA methylation levels at 26,333 CpGs representing 14,104 gene promoters by using the Illumina HumanMethylation27 platform and identified 87CpGs that are the most predictive diagnostic methylation biomarkers of prostate cancer.
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Cutaneous Angiosarcoma Following Breast-conserving Surgery and Radiation: An Analysis of 27 Cases

TL;DR: CPRASB differs from Stewart-Treves AS by its shorter latency period and lack of association with lymphedema, and is described as a recently recognized form of cutaneous postradiation angiosarcoma of the breast.