R
Robert Steele
Researcher at University of Dundee
Publications - 519
Citations - 24225
Robert Steele is an academic researcher from University of Dundee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Colorectal cancer. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 492 publications receiving 21963 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert Steele include Harvard University & NHS Tayside.
Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
Faecal Immunochemical Tests (FIT) for Haemoglobin for Timely Assessment of Patients with Symptoms of Colorectal Disease
Robert Steele,Callum G. Fraser +1 more
TL;DR: There is now significant evidence that faecal immunochemical tests (FIT) for haemoglobin have many advantages and no test is perfect and some cases of SCD will remain undetected; consequently safety-netting is required.
Journal ArticleDOI
Oestrogen receptors, lactate dehydrogenase and cellularity in human breast cancer
TL;DR: In this paper, the concentrations of oestrogen receptor, lactate dehydrogenase, and total soluble protein were measured on 98 breast tissues (80 breast cancers, 18 benign tissues) and the concentrations were significantly higher in breast cancers than in the benign tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dual energy CT − a possible new method to assess regression of rectal cancers after neoadjuvant treatment
TL;DR: This work aimed to assess the feasibility of DECT in quantifying tumor response to neoadjuvant therapy in loco‐advanced rectal cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI
Measurement of faecal haemoglobin with a faecal immunochemical test can assist in defining which patients attending primary care with rectal bleeding require urgent referral.
TL;DR: Patients with rectal bleeding and f-Hb <10 μg Hb/g faeces are unlikely to have SBD and could be investigated by sigmoidoscopy alone, a rational and practical way forward.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
UDDI access control
J. Dai,Robert Steele +1 more
TL;DR: This paper proposes a role-based access control model in private UDDI registries to help achieve information confidentiality inside corporate registries based on XACML, which exploits XML's own ability to build access control in a U DDI registry.