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Kwang Hyub Han

Researcher at Yonsei University

Publications -  694
Citations -  36674

Kwang Hyub Han is an academic researcher from Yonsei University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hepatocellular carcinoma & Hepatitis B virus. The author has an hindex of 80, co-authored 692 publications receiving 30974 citations. Previous affiliations of Kwang Hyub Han include University Health System.

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Prediction of microvascular invasion before curative resection of hepatocellular carcinoma

TL;DR: This work investigated preoperative predictors of microvascular invasion, one of TNM staging components and prognostic factors, which is underestimated preoperatively, due to inaccuracy of imaging modalities.
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How can we enhance the performance of liver stiffness measurement using FibroScan in diagnosing liver cirrhosis in patients with chronic hepatitis B

TL;DR: Different cutoff LSM values according to alanine aminotransferase level and combination with age-spleen-platelet ratio index can enhance the performance of LSM in CHB, regardless of ALT level.
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Applicability of BCLC stage for prognostic stratification in comparison with other staging systems: Single centre experience from long-term clinical outcomes of 1717 treatment-naïve patients with hepatocellular carcinoma

TL;DR: This work evaluated prognostic values of Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) stage compared with other staging systems, and identified discrepancies between treatment options chosen in Korean clinical practice and BCLC guidelines.
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Recent Variceal Bleeding: Doppler US Hepatic Vein Waveform in Assessment of Severity of Portal Hypertension and Vasoactive Drug Response

TL;DR: Doppler US hepatic vein waveform assessment is useful in the noninvasive evaluation of the severity of portal hypertension and the response to vasoactive drugs in patients with portals hypertension and variceal bleeding.
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TT virus infection is widespread in the general populations from different geographic regions.

TL;DR: It is suggested that TTV may be a common DNA virus with no clear disease association in humans with an extremely high prevalence in the general populations from different geographic regions.