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1 non-pedunculated rectal lesions (polyps and early cancers).
2 nded to detect high-grade dysplasia (HGD) or early cancer.
3 rrett's esophagus (BE) with dysplasia and/or early cancer.
4 radication treatment of BE with dysplasia or early cancer.
5 sed as sensitive biomarkers for diagnosis of early cancer.
6 to the diagnosis of treatable dysplasia and early cancer.
7 nagement of large flat colorectal polyps and early cancer.
8 to the development of novel tests to detect early cancers.
9 chitectures to characterize lung nodules and early cancers.
10 accuracy, identify tumor margins, and stage early cancers.
12 rrett's esophagus (BE) with dysplasia and/or early cancer and appropriate follow-up of these patients
15 een shown to visualize capillary patterns in early cancer and is complementary to magnification endos
16 could prove vital for the identification of early cancer and people at risk of developing cancer.
17 ledge about how these screening tests detect early cancer and polyps and assess factors that influenc
22 The prospect of a widespread screening for early cancers, based on inexpensive point-of-care testin
25 ta will be instrumental in identifying novel early cancer biomarkers and could provide a rationale fo
26 hnology platforms to facilitate detection of early cancer by means of biomarkers, and issues on the a
30 er2(+)p-p38(lo)p-Atf2(lo)Twist1(hi)E-cad(lo) early cancer cells that is invasive and can spread to ta
33 cient to generate at least two phenotypes of early cancer cells: genomic instability that involves mu
34 creening test that primarily is effective at early cancer detection and a screening test that is effe
35 d has favorable 5-year survival rates due to early cancer detection and availability of curative surg
36 duals can result in mortality reduction with early cancer detection and cancer prevention by detectio
37 d a screening test that is effective at both early cancer detection and cancer prevention through the
39 dvances the design of metabolic analysis for early cancer detection and holds promise as an efficient
40 ay highlights its potential to revolutionize early cancer detection and improve patient outcomes.
41 ly aid in screening prospective patients for early cancer detection and in monitoring the efficacy of
43 ) health care system improvements to enhance early cancer detection and management to reduce reliance
44 sults indicate potential clinical benefit of early cancer detection and minimal patient distress asso
45 y discusses PLOS Medicine's Special Issue on early cancer detection and minimal residual disease.
46 r findings could form the basis for improved early cancer detection and monitoring in high-risk cance
51 logy, with considerable potential to improve early cancer detection and risk assessment, and to enabl
52 tential to be applied in clinical diagnosis, early cancer detection and target identification for mol
57 ty may hold greater diagnostic potential for early cancer detection as opposed to the identification
58 NAs as sensitive and specific biomarkers for early cancer detection as well as having demonstrated re
60 usion Use of a standalone AI system improved early cancer detection by correctly identifying some can
73 oking cessation interventions, screening and early cancer detection in HIV-infected populations are o
74 ckade, further emphasizing the importance of early cancer detection in hosts that survive sepsis.
77 al information that may improve contrast for early cancer detection in the gastrointestinal tract.
79 omarker and molecular imaging limitations of early cancer detection strategies and elucidates the del
81 nomaterials on the accuracy of biosensors in early cancer detection such as lung, prostate, breast, a
82 This opens the possibility to develop an early cancer detection test based on a set of peptide se
86 band imaging have a 77-99.4% sensitivity for early cancer detection, a significant improvement when c
88 ulating nucleic acids in prenatal diagnosis, early cancer detection, and the diagnosis of infectious
89 port applications in rare variant detection, early cancer detection, and therapy selection with reduc
90 edical applications including ophthalmology, early cancer detection, and understanding fundamental di
91 free DNA (cfDNA) could enable more sensitive early cancer detection, but it is technologically challe
92 loser to the clinic where it can be used for early cancer detection, disease characterization and gui
93 ng as one of the diagnostic frontrunners for early cancer detection, disease monitoring, and treatmen
94 binations has the potential to revolutionize early cancer detection, especially for cancers with no a
95 RG variants are potentially useful to aid in early cancer detection, immediate patient risk stratific
96 led to the implementation in the clinic for early cancer detection, improved cancer staging, early d
97 w-proportion tumor subclones can be used for early cancer detection, prognostic assessment and therap
98 cians (PCPs) are significant contributors of early cancer detection, yet few studies have investigate
132 thelial cell apical-basal polarity occurs in early cancer development and is often correlated with in
135 n of cancer genes and occur predominantly in early cancer development rather than the later stages of
142 sy") offers great prospects for non-invasive early cancer diagnosis and clinical guidance, but requir
144 ion of low-frequency mutations, facilitating early cancer diagnosis and personalized treatment strate
146 e availability of the reviewed platforms for early cancer diagnosis and the approval of methylation i
151 se genes could provide a powerful method for early cancer diagnosis as well as insight into mechanism
152 related autoantibodies provides a means for early cancer diagnosis as well as leads for therapy.
153 eloped in this work show its suitability for early cancer diagnosis based on miRNA as a biomarker.
154 RNAs in biomedical field with an emphasis on early cancer diagnosis by overviewing both research base
159 ial to detect rare DNA-sequence variants for early cancer diagnosis or drug-resistance mutation ident
162 ne (considered as an excellent biomarker for early cancer diagnosis) with a detection limit of 66 ppb
163 cellular therapeutic modalities, preclinical early cancer diagnosis, and a novel approach in immunoth
164 fDNA) assay would be a promising approach to early cancer diagnosis, especially for patients with den
165 methylation detection via liquid biopsy for early cancer diagnosis, improvements in the sensitivity
166 associated molecules could be beneficial for early cancer diagnosis, monitoring and surveillance.
167 s great promise for its translational use in early cancer diagnosis, prognostic assessment of tumor b
174 his AI-based approach may be used for "Super Early" cancer diagnosis and amend the current immunother
175 This complex represents a potentially new early cancer diagnostic for detecting deficiencies in mi
176 ancer cells/tissues have great potential for early cancer diagnostic use, but their clinical potentia
177 ipment, which would offer a new platform for early cancer diagnostics, especially in those resource-l
179 lude that MT1-MMP plays an important role in early cancer dissemination by converting epithelial cell
181 sed mutagenesis allows the identification of early cancer drivers, but current sequencing methods hav
184 ents with Barrett esophagus and dysplasia or early cancer, endoscopic therapy consisting of resection
185 ntribution of transcriptional variability to early cancer evolution reflects a generic role in promot
187 anoids indicated the presence of an aberrant early cancer gene signature, which clustered with the he
188 ties of filter inference using examples from early cancer growth modelling and from epidermal growth
189 ning in at-risk populations and detection of early cancer has the potential to significantly alter su
193 of MRI to identify potential precancerous or early cancers in individuals at risk for pancreatic canc
194 submucosal dissection to treat dysplasia and early cancers in the luminal gastrointestinal tract.
195 logy and techniques, the future treatment of early cancers in the upper gastrointestinal tract may be
200 Finally, we consider existing strategies for early cancer interception with perspectives on the next
201 the pretest probability that a biomarker of early cancer is a true positive and warrants further inv
203 te stages, and that the genomic landscape of early cancers is not representative of that of lethal ca
205 s of anoscopy, which diagnoses some cases of early cancer; nevertheless, sensitivity of this test ran
207 copic mucosal resection (EMR) of superficial early cancers of the upper gastrointestinal tract is sta
209 issues reflective of low malignant potential/early cancer onset and possible pre-cancerous stages inv
210 r phenotype groups with differential risk of early cancer onset as well as lifetime risk of cancer.
211 ssues reflective of low potential malignancy/early cancer onset stages via long distance signaling be
212 circulating extracellular vesicles (EV) from early cancers or different types of host cells requires
215 Bloom syndrome is a disorder of profound and early cancer predisposition in which cells become hyperm
225 l translational potentials as biomarkers for early cancer screening, diagnostic and/or therapeutic in
232 performed by jail and prison nursing staff, early cancer symptoms are often missed altogether or mis
233 the biology and trajectory of precancer and early cancer to identify consequential disease that requ
234 subjects at high risk for cancer, to detect early cancer, to detect the early recurrence of establis
236 noninvasive repeatable biomarkers to detect early cancer treatment response and spare non-responders
237 nobiosensors are to explore the efficacy for early cancer tumour detection or single molecular detect
239 at multiple stages of gastric dysplasia and early cancer with FA supplementation initiated both at w
240 y, which allows gastroenterologists to treat early cancers with greater confidence regarding rates of