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Sumadi Lukman Anwar

Researcher at Gadjah Mada University

Publications -  68
Citations -  1147

Sumadi Lukman Anwar is an academic researcher from Gadjah Mada University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 52 publications receiving 763 citations. Previous affiliations of Sumadi Lukman Anwar include Hochschule Hannover & University of Indonesia.

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Loss of imprinting and allelic switching at the DLK1-MEG3 locus in human hepatocellular carcinoma.

TL;DR: Analysis of 10 hepatocellular adenomas and 5 cases of focal nodular hyperplasia confirmed that this epigenetic instability is specifically associated with the process of malignant transformation and not linked to increased proliferation per se.
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Transposable Elements in Human Cancer: Causes and Consequences of Deregulation.

TL;DR: The loss of epigenetic regulation and subsequent genomic instability, chromosomal aberrations, transcriptional deregulation, oncogenic activation, and aberration of non-coding RNAs are reviewed as the potential mechanisms underlying TE deregulation in human cancers.
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Quantitative cross-validation and content analysis of the 450k DNA methylation array from Illumina, Inc.

TL;DR: The newly released 450k methylation array from Illumina, Inc. provides a genome-wide quantitative representation of DNA methylation aberrations in a convenient format and the congruence with pyrosequencing data is very good.
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The global burden of cancer attributable to risk factors, 2010–19: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019

Khanh Bao Tran, +1018 more
- 01 Aug 2022 - 
TL;DR: The leading risk factors contributing to global cancer burden in 2019 were behavioural, whereas metabolic risk factors saw the largest increases between 2010 and 2019.
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Concordant hypermethylation of intergenic microRNA genes in human hepatocellular carcinoma as new diagnostic and prognostic marker

TL;DR: In primary human HCC specimens hypermethylation and expression of microRNA genes showed an inverse correlation, which is a highly specific marker for the detection of HCC and for poor prognosis.