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Seung-Mo Hong

Researcher at University of Ulsan

Publications -  383
Citations -  21628

Seung-Mo Hong is an academic researcher from University of Ulsan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pancreatic cancer & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 361 publications receiving 17907 citations. Previous affiliations of Seung-Mo Hong include University of Virginia Health System & Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

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The Number of Metastatic Lymph Nodes in Extrahepatic Bile Duct Carcinoma as a Prognostic Factor

TL;DR: The presence of metastasis to lymph nodes significantly decreased survival of patients with EBD carcinoma and it is proposed that nodal classification should be divided into N1 (metastasis in 1 to 4 regional lymph nodes) and N2 (metASTasis in 5 or more regional lymph node).
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Clinical outcomes of rectal neuroendocrine tumors ≤ 10 mm following endoscopic resection.

TL;DR: Results suggest that the outcome of rectal NETs (≤10 mm in size) following conventional endoscopic resection might be comparatively excellent, regardless of the resection margin status, however, long term follow-up data are required to confirm this.
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Solid-pseudopapillary neoplasm of the pancreas in children: can we predict malignancy?

TL;DR: Histologic malignant SPN has high risk of recurrence and should be considered more radical resection when finding a predominantly solid tumor in a CT scan, says this retrospective analysis.
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Measurement of the invasion depth of extrahepatic bile duct carcinoma: An alternative method overcoming the current T classification problems of the AJCC staging system.

TL;DR: The depth of invasion is evaluated in 222 cases of EBD carcinoma by measuring the distance between the basal lamina of the adjacent normal epithelium to the most deeply infiltrating tumor cells, and compared this evaluation to time of survival and other clinical and pathologic parameters.
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Granular cell tumor of the gastrointestinal tract: histologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 98 cases.

TL;DR: Although invasive GCT was rare, it could be observed in the GI tract with the following frequency: esophagus, colorectum, and stomach and high S-100 protein, CD56, CD68, and SOX-10 expression rates were observed in GCTs from GI tracts.