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Marc Baay

Researcher at University of Antwerp

Publications -  65
Citations -  2604

Marc Baay is an academic researcher from University of Antwerp. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cervical cancer & Population. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 63 publications receiving 2402 citations. Previous affiliations of Marc Baay include Erasmus University Rotterdam & Utrecht University.

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Comprehensive study of several general and type-specific primer pairs for detection of human papillomavirus DNA by PCR in paraffin-embedded cervical carcinomas

TL;DR: By using newly developed type-specific primer pairs (amplimer length, approximately 100 bp), an increase in HPV DNA detection was found and seemed to be inversely correlated to the length of the amplimer produced.
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Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes: an intriguing player in the survival of colorectal cancer patients.

TL;DR: A role for infiltrating CD3+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes in colorectal cancer whereby tumor infiltration could reflect a general principle of antitumor immunity, irrespective of the MSI-status is suggested.
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A Review of the Most Promising Biomarkers in Colorectal Cancer: One Step Closer to Targeted Therapy

TL;DR: An update of the most recent data on promising biological prognostic and/or predictive markers, including microsatellite instability, epidermal growth factor receptor, KRAS, BRAF, CpG island methylator phenotype, cytotoxic T lymphocytes, forkhead box P3-positive T cells, receptor for hyaluronic acid-mediated motility, phosphatase and tensin homolog, and T-cell originated protein kinase, in patients with CRC is provided.
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Comparison of the sulforhodamine B assay and the clonogenic assay for in vitro chemoradiation studies.

TL;DR: The SRB assay was shown to be as useful as the more traditional CA for research on chemotherapy/radiotherapy interactions in cell lines with moderate radiosensitivity and will be used for more extensive in vitro research on radiosensitizing compounds in these cell lines.
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Tumor Cells and Tumor-Associated Macrophages: Secreted Proteins as Potential Targets for Therapy

TL;DR: The interaction between tumor cells and macrophages provides opportunities for therapy and secreted proteins as targets for intervention are discussed.