Institution
Tata Memorial Hospital
Healthcare•Mumbai, India•
About: Tata Memorial Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Mumbai, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Cancer & Breast cancer. The organization has 3187 authors who have published 4636 publications receiving 109143 citations.
Topics: Cancer, Breast cancer, Population, Sarcoma, Radiation therapy
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The differential expression of mRNAs between the primary tumour samples of SCC of the oral tongue and their metastasis was studied and a gene, FABP5, coding for Epidermal fatty acid binding protein (E-FABP-GenBank Accession) was identified, which was up to 4-fold higher in thePrimary tumours as compared to the corresponding metastatic lymph nodes by northern blot analysis.
29 citations
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TL;DR: The prognosis for persons with cartilaginous tumors of the jaws is more serious than for those with similar lesions located in the long bones, and radical resection is advised in all cases, benign or malignant, to prevent local recurrence.
29 citations
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29 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that E‐cadherin, a cell adhesion molecule which plays a crucial role in cell—cell aggregation during development, is also present in the bone marrow stroma and its presence on a subset of CD34+cells leads to speculation on whether this CAM has a role in adherence of primitive stem cells to the marrowStroma.
29 citations
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TL;DR: Results with supraomohyoid dissection are comparable to radical neck dissection when the upper jugular nodes are histologically negative and histological grading forms an important parameter for identification of a favourable subset in T4 tumours.
Abstract: Buccal Mucosa cancer is common in India, T4 tumours being the most common (66%). T1 tumours are rarely seen (4%). Disease-free survival (DFS) at 18 mo with surgery alone for T2, T3, and T4 tumours is 57%, 43%, and 21%, respectively. Addition of postoperative radiation therapy (RT) for T3 and T4 lesions increases DFS to 60% and 35%, respectively. Marginal mandibulectomy is advocated for lesions close to the lower gingiva when the bone is clinically and radiologically uninvolved. The local control rate with marginal mandibulectomy is 79%. In T3/T4 tumours, results with supraomohyoid dissection are comparable to radical neck dissection when the upper jugular nodes are histologically negative. In T4 tumours, histological grading forms an important parameter for identification of a favourable subset. In well-differentiated tumours DFS was 48% with surgery and 72% with surgery and postoperative RT; in moderately differentiated tumours it was 12% and 21%, respectively; and in the poorly differentiated group there were no survivors.
29 citations
Authors
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Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Al B. Benson | 113 | 578 | 48364 |
Keitaro Matsuo | 97 | 818 | 37349 |
Ashish K. Jha | 87 | 503 | 30020 |
Noopur Raje | 82 | 506 | 27878 |
Muthupandian Ashokkumar | 76 | 511 | 20771 |
Snehal G. Patel | 73 | 367 | 16905 |
Rainu Kaushal | 58 | 232 | 16794 |
Ajit S. Puri | 54 | 369 | 9948 |
Jasbir S. Arora | 51 | 351 | 15696 |
Sudeep Sarkar | 48 | 273 | 10087 |
Ian T. Magrath | 47 | 107 | 8084 |
Pankaj Chaturvedi | 45 | 325 | 15871 |
Pradeep Kumar Gupta | 44 | 416 | 7181 |
Shiv K. Gupta | 43 | 150 | 8911 |
Kikkeri N. Naresh | 43 | 245 | 6264 |