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Marguerite Guiguet

Researcher at University of Paris

Publications -  118
Citations -  8439

Marguerite Guiguet is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Viral load & Population. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 118 publications receiving 7901 citations. Previous affiliations of Marguerite Guiguet include Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University & Institut Gustave Roussy.

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Surgical resection of colorectal carcinoma metastases to the liver : A prognostic scoring system to improve case selection, based on 1568 patients

TL;DR: Five‐year survival rates after resection of liver metastases from colorectal carcinoma are close to 25%, and selection of patients likely to benefit from surgery remains controversial and subjective.
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Effect of immunodeficiency, HIV viral load, and antiretroviral therapy on the risk of individual malignancies (FHDH-ANRS CO4): a prospective cohort study

TL;DR: CD4 cell count was the most predictive risk factor for all malignancies apart from anal cancer and cART would be most beneficial if it restores or maintains CD4 count above 500 cells per microL, thereby indicating an earlier diagnosis of HIV infection and an earlier treatment initiation.
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Detection of Nosocomial Lung Infection in Ventilated Patients: Use of a Protected Specimen Brush and Quantitative Culture Techniques in 147 Patients

TL;DR: It is suggested that the appearance of pulmonary infiltrates and purulent tracheal secretions does not result from bacterial pneumonia in a majority of patients.
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Long-term survival following resection of colorectal hepatic metastases

TL;DR: Characteristics of patients who survived more than 5 years after liver resection of colorectal metastases are analyzed to find out whether these characteristics are related to survival and disease progression.
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Influence of a defunctioning stoma on leakage rates after low colorectal anastomosis and colonic J pouch-anal anastomosis.

TL;DR: Anal sphincter function is increasingly preserved following rectal excision for cancer and provides a better quality of life for patients than does a permanent colostomy, and the incidence of anastomotic complications following two forms of reconstruction after resection for mid‐rectal cancer is examined.