M
Marianne Phillips
Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital
Publications - 36
Citations - 1171
Marianne Phillips is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Palliative care. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 31 publications receiving 998 citations. Previous affiliations of Marianne Phillips include University of Western Australia & Princess Margaret Hospital for Children.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Breast Cancer Before Age 40 Years
TL;DR: Chemotherapy, endocrine, and local therapies have the potential to significantly impact both the physiologic health-including future fertility, premature menopause, and bone health-and the psychological health of young women as they face a diagnosis of breast cancer.
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Supportive and palliative care needs of families of children with life-threatening illnesses in Western Australia: evidence to guide the development of a palliative care service:
TL;DR: Education of health professionals and parents regarding the concepts and introduction of palliative and supportive care is required for children with life threatening or chronic conditions and their families.
Journal ArticleDOI
The supportive and palliative care needs of Australian families of children who die from cancer.
TL;DR: Perceptions of parents of children who died from cancer regarding the palliative and supportive care they received in hospital and in community settings are identified.
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Transdermal fentanyl for pain relief in a paediatric palliative care population
TL;DR: It is suggested that transdermal fentanyl is both effective and acceptable for children and their families.
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Novel BRD4-NUT fusion isoforms increase the pathogenic complexity in NUT midline carcinoma.
K. Thompson-Wicking,Richard W. Francis,Anja Stirnweiss,E. Ferrari,Mathew D. Welch,Elizabeth Baker,Ashleigh Murch,Ashleigh Murch,Alexander M. Gout,Kim W. Carter,Adrian Charles,Marianne Phillips,Ursula R. Kees,Alex H. Beesley +13 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the novel BRD4–NUT fusion in PER-624 encodes a functional protein that is central to the oncogenic mechanism in these cells, contributing to the understanding of the genetic diversity of NMC.