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1 y has opened a new era of nucleic acid-based molecular diagnostics.
2 acter stool antigen CIDTs versus culture and molecular diagnostics.
3 nce the advent of antiretroviral therapy and molecular diagnostics.
4 nomics, small genome sequencing and clinical molecular diagnostics.
5 ith the naked eye is seemingly impossible in molecular diagnostics.
6  provide inexpensive and accessible advanced molecular diagnostics.
7 sents a breakthrough shift into a new era of molecular diagnostics.
8 ne expression would catalyze a revolution in molecular diagnostics.
9 verse range of DNA or RNA viruses by routine molecular diagnostics.
10  lead to a versatile and portable device for molecular diagnostics.
11 ated with the clinical adoption of WGS-based molecular diagnostics.
12 n most HCCs and provides a unique target for molecular diagnostics.
13  They have been approved as therapeutics and molecular diagnostics.
14 ntially useful as bright contrast agents for molecular diagnostics.
15 ion studies, signalling pathway analysis and molecular diagnostics.
16  computation and as applied as point-of-care molecular diagnostics.
17  development of true point-of-care tests for molecular diagnostics.
18 logy applications related to targeted enzyme molecular diagnostics.
19 can cause ocular inflammation by serology or molecular diagnostics.
20 ge of potential applications in clinical and molecular diagnostics.
21 at potential for biomedical applications and molecular diagnostics.
22 g as well as emerging approaches in clinical molecular diagnostics.
23 ovides more 'tools' for DNA manipulation and molecular diagnostics.
24 which is of great interest in genotyping and molecular diagnostics.
25 ation is becoming increasingly important for molecular diagnostics.
26 testing, and management are all dependent on molecular diagnostics.
27  DNA sample before sequencing is critical in molecular diagnostics.
28  resolution, providing a robust platform for molecular diagnostics.
29 iation, disease susceptibility, and clinical molecular diagnostics.
30  to a number of applications in the field of molecular diagnostics.
31 e disease genes has allowed establishment of molecular diagnostics.
32 ed in many fields of biomedical research and molecular diagnostics.
33 Banff working groups, and standardization of molecular diagnostics.
34 ow-complexity, highly sensitive and accurate molecular diagnostics.
35 ially an important clinical marker in cancer molecular diagnostics.
36 nd outcomes related to the use of SARS-CoV-2 molecular diagnostics.
37 sequences yield unique genome signatures for molecular diagnostics.
38 nomics revolution (e.g., microarrays) and of molecular diagnostics.
39  biology and is poised to enter the field of molecular diagnostics.
40 ll also greatly assist in drug discovery and molecular diagnostics.
41 bes makes this method attractive for routine molecular diagnostics.
42 mechanisms is poor, which is hampering rapid molecular diagnostics.
43 aditional stool microscopy, despite gains in molecular diagnostics.
44   Endonucleases have recently widely used in molecular diagnostics.
45  tool for advanced quantitative screening in molecular diagnostics.
46 ture research directions toward democratized molecular diagnostics.
47 applications in gene expression analysis and molecular diagnostics.
48 uture taxonomy enrichments based on emerging molecular diagnostics.
49 l slider cassette designed for point-of-care molecular diagnostics.
50  the potential to revolutionize the field of molecular diagnostics.
51 , reinforcing its potential for quantitative molecular diagnostics.
52 aded platinum nanoparticles to develop novel molecular diagnostics.
53 n detection has wide-ranging implications in molecular diagnostics.
54 development of next-generation point-of-care molecular diagnostics.
55 to transmission, were detectable by standard molecular diagnostics.
56 and sustainability of machine learning-based molecular diagnostics.
57 ation to guide therapy and, potentially, for molecular diagnostics.
58 rs, promising a new wave of simple and rapid molecular diagnostics.
59 ent ability to exploit the full potential of molecular diagnostics.
60 cacies, have recently become supplemented by molecular diagnostics.
61 leic acid sequences is a major bottleneck in molecular diagnostics.
62 ow volume, high throughput opportunities for molecular diagnostics.
63 h-throughput polymerase chain reaction (PCR) molecular diagnostics, a method was developed to rapidly
64 ents will include simpler and less expensive molecular diagnostics, advances in the understanding of
65   Here, we present acoustofluidic integrated molecular diagnostics (AIMDx) on a chip, a platform enab
66 pment of miniaturized analytical systems for molecular diagnostics and beyond.
67 hat scientific and technological advances in molecular diagnostics and bioinformatics are well integr
68                                              Molecular diagnostics and biomarker discovery should ben
69 e potential to offer simple sample-to-answer molecular diagnostics and can inform healthcare workers
70 eration sequencing (NGS) are revolutionizing molecular diagnostics and clinical medicine.
71 ility and virulence and could render current molecular diagnostics and countermeasures ineffective.
72 genetic variants with phenotype improve both molecular diagnostics and drug discovery and offer clini
73                                              Molecular diagnostics and early assessment of treatment
74 nal efforts focused on using these tools for molecular diagnostics and for the discovery of therapeut
75 d cancer; new approaches in chemoprevention, molecular diagnostics and genetic testing, and therapy;
76          This method can be widely useful as molecular diagnostics and genomic technologies become ro
77 rcomes existing limitations in exosome-based molecular diagnostics and holds a powerful position for
78 ction imaging provides new opportunities for molecular diagnostics and image-guided biomedical applic
79  reagents, and amplify detection signals for molecular diagnostics and imaging.
80 ntions should include a combination of rapid molecular diagnostics and improved chemotherapy to short
81 antibody testing, transplantation pathology, molecular diagnostics and laboratory support for the inc
82 ain Reaction (PCR) is an essential method in molecular diagnostics and life sciences.
83 enefits of targeted therapy and the power of molecular diagnostics and monitoring.
84 aining increasing attention in the fields of molecular diagnostics and nanomedicine for the delivery
85 pands the utility of nanopore sequencing for molecular diagnostics and other applications, especially
86 the potential of alphavbeta8 as a target for molecular diagnostics and personalized therapy regimens.
87                        A brief discussion of molecular diagnostics and possible safety concerns is al
88 ogy research and the development of improved molecular diagnostics and prevention schemes for this ne
89 rgan systems, has the potential to transform molecular diagnostics and prognostics while uncovering n
90 o these findings, including the prospects of molecular diagnostics and rational therapeutics.
91  DNA at surfaces and interfaces ranging from molecular diagnostics and sequencing to biosensing.
92 ity of the virus, which has implications for molecular diagnostics and the design of potential vaccin
93  noninvasive methods of diagnosis as well as molecular diagnostics and their merits and shortcomings
94  functionality and efficacy in the layout of molecular diagnostics and therapeutic systems.
95                               Development of molecular diagnostics and therapeutics is of critical im
96 g blocks for future transformative precision molecular diagnostics and therapeutics.
97  of high-quality, exosome- and exomere-based molecular diagnostics and therapeutics.
98 tion patterns has major potential to advance molecular diagnostics and underpin research investigatio
99 proaches, including applications of advanced molecular diagnostics and vaccine probe studies, as well
100 EOC, and consequently may serve as important molecular diagnostics and/or therapeutic targets for the
101 of synthetic biology in vaccine development, molecular diagnostics, and cell-based therapeutics, emph
102 dvance many fields including drug discovery, molecular diagnostics, and clinical studies.
103 represents one of the greatest challenges in molecular diagnostics, and remains an unsolved problem.
104 regulation, drug delivery, gene therapy, and molecular diagnostics, and show promise for both antisen
105 algorithm using symptoms, chest radiography, molecular diagnostics, and tuberculin skin testing.
106  India, using symptom criteria, radiography, molecular diagnostics, and tuberculin skin tests.
107 a robust pipeline of new tools, particularly molecular diagnostics, and well over 50 companies active
108 the goals of understanding their genomes for molecular diagnostics applications, vaccine redevelopmen
109 nable to identify active state of infection, molecular diagnostics are an effective means to detect Z
110  which could lead to amplification bias when molecular diagnostics are applied for L. pneumophila det
111                                              Molecular diagnostics are considered the most promising
112 d the potential impact of EATR strategies on molecular diagnostics are discussed.
113 ients with metastatic prostate cancer (mPC), molecular diagnostics are increasingly used.
114                                      Current molecular diagnostics are limited in the number and type
115                                              Molecular diagnostics are of increasing importance when
116                           Nucleic acid-based molecular diagnostics are particularly well suited for t
117  order to counter the common perception that molecular diagnostics are too complicated to work in low
118 amplification (LAMP) is increasingly used in molecular diagnostics as an alternative to PCR based met
119 as major implications for the future of both molecular diagnostics as well as cancer chemotherapy.
120 nostics and protein analysis, cell handling, molecular diagnostics, as well as food, water, and soil
121 l to enable single cell studies for advanced molecular diagnostics, as well as wider applications in
122 or obstacles to implement nucleic acid-based molecular diagnostics at the point-of-care (POC) and in
123               This puts applications such as molecular diagnostics based on the analysis of cell-free
124                                              Molecular diagnostics based on the polymerase chain reac
125 ave important applications in ultrasensitive molecular diagnostics, bioterrorism agent detection, and
126 ing (NGS) is emerging as a powerful tool for molecular diagnostics but remains limited by cumbersome
127  studies designed to help evaluate new rapid molecular diagnostics by developing, testing, and applyi
128 ection of RNA has the potential to transform molecular diagnostics by enabling simple on-site analysi
129 e properties of Argonaute (Ago) proteins for molecular diagnostics by introducing an artificial nucle
130 tence should encourage the implementation of molecular diagnostics by National Tuberculosis Programme
131                                              Molecular diagnostics can facilitate pathogen detection
132                                Point-of-care molecular diagnostics can provide efficient and cost-eff
133 features hold promise for bringing RCA-based molecular diagnostics closer to the point-of-care.
134 oration of D-cycloserine resistance in novel molecular diagnostics could allow for targeted use of th
135 ore, we felt a need for more evidence before molecular diagnostics could be routinely integrated and
136                                   Innovative molecular diagnostics deployed in the clinic enable new
137                               Interestingly, molecular diagnostics did not identify an association wi
138 s are major players in the race for improved molecular diagnostics due to their convenience, temporal
139  Medical Director, Clinical Microbiology and Molecular Diagnostics, Dynacare Laboratories, and Froedt
140                           Histopathology and molecular diagnostics (e.g., 16S rRNA gene PCR/sequencin
141                                   With rapid molecular diagnostics emerging in clinical microbiology
142  diagnostics, improvement and advancement of molecular diagnostics, emerging diagnostics, including r
143 which would not be detected by current rapid molecular diagnostics employed in South Africa that asse
144                                              Molecular diagnostics enable rapid and simplified diagno
145                                              Molecular diagnostics enable sensitive detection of resp
146 ibility, aptamers have sparked innovation in molecular diagnostics, enabled advances in synthetic bio
147 ast data in combination with advancements in molecular diagnostics enables much greater precision in
148 pplications related to analytical chemistry, molecular diagnostics, environmental monitoring, and nat
149 red gene circuits, bring new capabilities to molecular diagnostics, expanding the molecular detection
150                        Individual omics-wide molecular diagnostics, extracorporeal therapies, and dru
151                                              Molecular diagnostics focused on analysis of the followi
152 f age and during diarrhea using quantitative molecular diagnostics for 29 pathogens.
153                                              Molecular diagnostics for crop diseases can guide the pr
154             Moreover, EVs are widely used in molecular diagnostics for early detection of disease-ass
155 t decade, this work has spawned a new era of molecular diagnostics for early detection of this condit
156 d therapy selection.1,2 Rapid and accessible molecular diagnostics for fusion-driven leukemias such a
157  2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, during which time molecular diagnostics for infectious diseases have assum
158 e systems for nematode-pest-crop management: molecular diagnostics for nematode identification, genet
159 used to exponentially increase the signal in molecular diagnostics for nucleic acids, but there are n
160              The value of rapid, panel-based molecular diagnostics for positive blood culture bottles
161 ructive spatiotemporal lipidomics, advancing molecular diagnostics for precision medicine.
162 mercially available rapid (results <3 hours) molecular diagnostics for respiratory viruses as compare
163 ection could allow the development of rapid, molecular diagnostics for sCJD and has implications for
164  assays has resulted in the increased use of molecular diagnostics for the routine detection of HSV i
165  The development and implementation of rapid molecular diagnostics for tuberculosis (TB) drug-suscept
166 to facilitate their use in applications like molecular diagnostics, force sensing, and nanorobotics t
167 has played a major role in the transition of molecular diagnostics from research to routine clinical
168 properties spanning the fields of chemistry, molecular diagnostics, gene regulation, medicine, and ma
169                                              Molecular diagnostics has generated substantial dividend
170                                 The field of molecular diagnostics has greatly decreased the time it
171              The widespread use of multiplex molecular diagnostics has led to a significant increase
172 re than a century, the recent development of molecular diagnostics has shed new light on the origin a
173                                        Rapid molecular diagnostics have great potential to limit the
174                           Recently, emerging molecular diagnostics have met requirements for speed, l
175                               Most recently, molecular diagnostics have played an essential role in t
176                   Circulating biomarkers and molecular diagnostics have shown substantial predictive
177                                              Molecular diagnostics have significantly advanced the ea
178                                     However, molecular diagnostics hold great potential.
179                                              Molecular diagnostics, however, have been difficult to i
180 otechnology and will have profound impact on molecular diagnostics, imaging and therapeutics.
181                                              Molecular diagnostics implemented at $100 or less can ge
182  setting, this study shows the potential for molecular diagnostics in ADPKD that is likely to become
183 importance of an epidemiological history and molecular diagnostics in ascertaining insights into tran
184  strong contender for versatile and portable molecular diagnostics in both research and clinical sett
185 y of employing a sample pooling strategy for molecular diagnostics in clinical and epidemiologic mala
186 f a variety of nucleic acid targets enabling molecular diagnostics in clinics.
187 l practice can improve drug use by providing molecular diagnostics in concert with molecular therapeu
188 es on the relative merits of 3 approaches to molecular diagnostics in hematologic malignancies: indic
189                               The utility of molecular diagnostics in invasive fungal infections is d
190 y provides a comprehensive assessment of PZA molecular diagnostics in M/XDR TB cases.
191 rate of (68)Ga-PSMA-guided bone biopsies for molecular diagnostics in mPC patients.
192  of next generation sequencing platforms for molecular diagnostics in non-small-cell lung cancer is i
193 lecular programming in general and DNA-based molecular diagnostics in particular.
194 ies continue to be driven by developments in molecular diagnostics in pediatric genitourinary tumors.
195 -specific antibodies; the potential value of molecular diagnostics in such cases and recommendations
196 t practical limitations to the deployment of molecular diagnostics in the field and demonstrates how
197 rrhea in children under 2 using quantitative molecular diagnostics in the MAL-ED cohort.
198 d, highlighting the need for quality-ensured molecular diagnostics in the management of cancer.
199 rtant implications for the interpretation of molecular diagnostics, including identifying patients at
200 cine has engendered a need for corresponding molecular diagnostics, including noninvasive molecular i
201  the potential to expand the availability of molecular diagnostics into low-resource settings.
202                                     Bringing molecular diagnostics into practice can provide critical
203 . influenzae in CSF, and that application of molecular diagnostics is a feasible way to enhance local
204 rying nanoceria in the lab and point-of-care molecular diagnostics is anticipated.
205 espoke diagnosis and treatment, this area of molecular diagnostics is beginning to see an upsurge in
206                                              Molecular diagnostics is crucial for prevention, identif
207                Accurate, rapid, and low-cost molecular diagnostics is essential in managing outbreaks
208  impact of these isolates on the accuracy of molecular diagnostics is not well characterized.
209                                              Molecular diagnostics is progressing from low-throughput
210                                              Molecular diagnostics is typically outsourced to well-eq
211              To challenge the ability of our molecular diagnostics laboratory to use whole-genome seq
212 occur prior to the arrival of specimens in a molecular diagnostics laboratory.
213   In the field of rare diseases, progress in molecular diagnostics led to the recognition that varian
214 c evaluation, cyst fluid analysis, and novel molecular diagnostics, many of these lesions remain diff
215 uture work with contact tracing and advanced molecular diagnostics may allow for identification of MR
216                   In kidney transplantation, molecular diagnostics may be a valuable approach to impr
217                      The expense inherent to molecular diagnostics may be an overriding concern for a
218 demiologic investigation in conjunction with molecular diagnostics may enable early identification of
219                      Although the broad term molecular diagnostics may encompass techniques to identi
220                          Expense inherent to molecular diagnostics may prevent laboratories from util
221                          Expense inherent to molecular diagnostics may prevent laboratories from util
222 s performed to evaluate the caveats of using molecular diagnostics (MDX) to distinguish between these
223 tors has significant advantages (simplifying molecular diagnostics methods, reducing size, time, and
224  challenges and opportunities for developing molecular diagnostics needed to support STH control effo
225 ditary spastic paraplegia (HSP), progress in molecular diagnostics needs to be translated into robust
226                             In addition, new molecular diagnostics now permit rapid detection of drug
227                               Mutation-based molecular diagnostics of autosomal dominant polycystic k
228 f growing practical interest with respect to molecular diagnostics of cancer, infectious and genetic
229 ations of this sampling methodology to rapid molecular diagnostics of cutaneous allergies and infecti
230 in biofluids are emerging biomarkers for the molecular diagnostics of diseases, but their clinical us
231 -of-concept bioassay for simple and portable molecular diagnostics of emerging pathogens using electr
232 aCGH), the most commonly used technology for molecular diagnostics of genomic disorders.
233 ive, accurate and sensitive alternatives for molecular diagnostics of MDR- and XDR-TB.
234  This finding has important implications for molecular diagnostics of PMD.
235               Thus, clinical RNA-Seq extends molecular diagnostics of rare genodermatoses, and it cou
236 iency is associated with muscular dystrophy, molecular diagnostics of the plectin gene provides progn
237 we demonstrate a Lab-on-paper for all-in-one molecular diagnostics of zika, dengue, and chikungunya v
238                                              Molecular diagnostics offer an emerging diagnostic strat
239                                              Molecular diagnostics offer an increase in sensitivity f
240                                      In sum, molecular diagnostics on direct stool specimens greatly
241 rization based on guidelines, utilization of molecular diagnostics, particularly kinase domain mutati
242                           Recent advances in molecular diagnostics, pathobiology, and developmental t
243                                              Molecular diagnostics present an opportunity for more ef
244                                          For molecular diagnostics, primers were designed from the ca
245                               As part of our molecular diagnostics program, we have now encountered f
246 l & Melinda Gates Foundation Next Generation Molecular Diagnostics Project.
247 ning methods to modern synthetic biology and molecular diagnostics protocols.
248                                              Molecular diagnostics provided a supportive microbiologi
249 rchers and clinicians to perform multiplexed molecular diagnostics quickly and easily.
250           Multimodal integration of advanced molecular diagnostics, radiological and histological ima
251 ased RFLP to make it a faster format, DuPont Molecular Diagnostics recently introduced the IS6110-Pvu
252                        Current approaches to molecular diagnostics rely heavily on PCR amplification
253 des but predicting their effects in clinical molecular diagnostics remains challenging.
254 e of the limited signal-to-background ratio, molecular diagnostics requires molecular amplification o
255                                        Rapid molecular diagnostics (RMDs) have the potential to infor
256                            At present, rapid molecular diagnostics (RMDs) that can identify this phen
257 istance, particularly katG p.Ser315Thr, into molecular diagnostics should enable targeted treatment o
258                                      In this molecular diagnostics study we analysed archived serum f
259 ein assays, which are highly sought after in molecular diagnostics such as cancer diagnosis and treat
260                                              Molecular diagnostics such as quantitative polymerase ch
261                                   The use of molecular diagnostics, such as reverse transcription PCR
262 nd fully automated Beckman Coulter DxN Veris Molecular Diagnostics System (DxN Veris System) was eval
263 ostics system is also known as the Veris MDx molecular diagnostics system and the Veris MDx system.).
264 eliminary results of a portable and low-cost molecular diagnostics system for ZIKV infection are repo
265                                The DxN Veris molecular diagnostics system is also known as the Veris
266 w, fully automated Beckman Coulter DxN Veris molecular diagnostics system was evaluated at 10 Europea
267            Four ongoing research hotspots in molecular diagnostics-target preamplification-free detec
268 ancer treatment, the growing availability of molecular diagnostics techniques may help in identifying
269                                  As pathogen molecular diagnostics technology develops, the software
270  chemistry and detection continue to improve molecular diagnostics technology, blood samples are stil
271 ights into disease pathogenesis, and lead to molecular diagnostics that can be used to optimize the t
272                                   Therefore, molecular diagnostics that include markers for rifampici
273                                              Molecular diagnostics that rapidly and accurately predic
274                                              Molecular diagnostics that rapidly and accurately predic
275      Our findings enabled the development of molecular diagnostics that we used to confirm persistenc
276 practice of oncology is being transformed by molecular diagnostics that will enable predictive and pe
277                          Despite advances in molecular diagnostics, the ability to rapidly diagnose M
278             Despite the advancement of rapid molecular diagnostics, the use of plate cultures inocula
279 noassays are fundamental analytical tools in molecular diagnostics, therapy monitoring and drug disco
280       CRISPR-Cas systems have revolutionized molecular diagnostics through their specificity and prog
281 nator health and the utility of colony-level molecular diagnostics to assess environmental suitabilit
282 ing results encourage further development of molecular diagnostics to be used with whole blood for de
283 ides a novel way for molecular therapies and molecular diagnostics to come together in the discovery
284 I) to establish and monitor hypomyelination, molecular diagnostics to determine a specific etiology,
285 oring the potential benefit of comprehensive molecular diagnostics to enable early antibiotic optimiz
286 ere is an urgent need for rapid and accurate molecular diagnostics to identify COVID-19-positive pati
287 these newly discovered allergens will enable molecular diagnostics to identify patients at high risk
288 , to develop novel diagnostic techniques and molecular diagnostics, to establish a program for identi
289                                              Molecular diagnostics tools (quantitative PCR, in situ h
290                            Recently, Luminex Molecular Diagnostics (Toronto, Canada) developed 23 ana
291                 Traditional technologies for molecular diagnostics using blood are limited to laborat
292 hment system (HOLMES) for amplification-free molecular diagnostics using massively paralleled and hie
293                                              Molecular diagnostics using tissue gene expression and b
294 tral to modern molecular biology and also to molecular diagnostics where identification of a particul
295                Development of cost-effective molecular diagnostics will help bridge the cancer diagno
296 /strain level discrimination, is critical in molecular diagnostics with major impacts in areas such a
297  indicate damage to brain tissue could yield molecular diagnostics with the potential to improve how
298 med a direct comparative analysis of current molecular diagnostics with WGS.
299 ultiorgan transplant gene panel by the Banff Molecular Diagnostics Working Group (MDWG).
300       The availability of rapid and reliable molecular diagnostics would therefore aid future studies

 
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