W
Winnie Yeo
Researcher at The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Publications - 291
Citations - 19511
Winnie Yeo is an academic researcher from The Chinese University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 282 publications receiving 16440 citations. Previous affiliations of Winnie Yeo include University of Hong Kong.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Value of quality of life analysis in liver cancer: A clinician's perspective.
Leung Li,Winnie Yeo +1 more
TL;DR: Difficulties regarding the use of HRQOL data in research and clinical practice, including choosing a suitable instrument, problems of missing data, data interpretation, analysis and presentation are examined.
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Nivolumab dose escalation and expansion in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): The CheckMate 040 study.
Ignacio Melero,Bruno Sangro,Thomas Cheung Yau,Chiun Hsu,Masatoshi Kudo,Todd S. Crocenzi,Tae-You Kim,Su Pin Choo,Jörg Trojan,Tim Meyer,Theodore H. Welling,Winnie Yeo,Akhil Chopra,Jeffrey Anderson,Christine Dela Cruz,Lixin Lang,Jaclyn Neely,Hao Tang,Anthony B. El-Khoueiry +18 more
TL;DR: Interim analyses of safety, efficacy, and exploratory biomarkers in patients with advanced HCC treated with nivolumab in the CheckMate 040 study report updated interim results of safety/tolerability and objective response rate (ORR) by RECIST...
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Chemotherapy-Related Amenorrhea and Menopause in Young Chinese Breast Cancer Patients: Analysis on Incidence, Risk Factors and Serum Hormone Profiles.
Giok S. Liem,Frankie Mo,Elizabeth Pang,Joyce J. S. Suen,Nelson L.S. Tang,Kun M. Lee,Claudia H. W. Yip,Wing H. Tam,Rita Ng,Jane Koh,Christopher C. H. Yip,Grace Wing Shan Kong,Winnie Yeo +12 more
TL;DR: After adjuvant chemotherapy, the majority of young Chinese breast cancer patients developed CRA; ~50% developed CRM, with 61% at age ≤45, and age at diagnosis is the only factor associated with CRM.
Journal ArticleDOI
High carriage rate of TT virus in the cervices of pregnant women
TL;DR: A high rate of cervical carriage (66%) of TTV DNA was found by polymerase chain reaction, which suggests that perinatal and sexual transmission is possible.
Journal ArticleDOI
Quality of life and quality-adjusted survival (Q-TWiST) in patients receiving dose-intensive or standard dose chemotherapy for high-risk primary breast cancer
Juerg Bernhard,David Zahrieh,J. J. Zhang,Giovanni Martinelli,Russell L. Basser,C. Hürny,John F. Forbes,Stefan Aebi,Winnie Yeo,Beat Thürlimann,Michael D. Green,M.A. Colleoni,Richard D. Gelber,M. Castiglione-Gertsch,Karen N. Price,A. Goldhirsch,Alan S. Coates +16 more
TL;DR: Despite greater initial toxicity, quality-adjusted survival was similar or better with dose-intensive treatment as compared to standard treatment, and QL considerations should not be prohibitive if future intensive therapies show superior efficacy.