Now showing items 24-43 of 44

    • Molecular features of aggressive prostate carcinoma 

      Flynn, Louise (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2015)
      Prostate cancer is the most common form of malignancy in the male urinary tract and accounts for more than 20% of all newly diagnosed male cancer cases. The vast majority of prostate tumours are clinically insignificant, ...
    • Molecular gene and regulatory profiles in thyroid cancer 

      Denning, Karen (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2009)
      Thyroid carcinoma is the most common endocrine malignancy, with an incidence of approximately eighty cases per year in Ireland and thirty seven thousand cases per year in the United States. While thyroid cancer may be ...
    • Molecular markers in cervical cancer 

      Murphy, Niamh (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2004)
      Despite the introduction of the Papanicolaou (Pap) test carcinoma of the cervix remains one of the most common malignancies amongst women worldwide. It is hoped that the use of HPV testing and molecular biomarkers in ...
    • Molecular Mechanisms of Advanced Prostate Cancer 

      BRADY, LAUREN MARIE (Trinity College Dublin. School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology, 2018)
      Globally, prostate cancer is the fourth most common cancer type. Five year survival rates for primary localised disease are high, however these figures decrease significantly with the onset of metastasis. Obesity and ...
    • Molecular signatures in papillary thyroid carcinoma 

      Cahill, Susanne (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2007)
      Papillary thyroid carcinomas (PTC) are the most frequently occurring type of thyroid malignancy (85%-90%). PTC affects females more frequently than males, with a ratio of 3:1 and can be present in any age group, the mean ...
    • Molecular signatures of prostate cancer 

      Murphy, Amanda (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2008)
      Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in Irish men and the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths. In the United States, there are approximately 234,000 new cases diagnosed every year and 27,350 deaths. ...
    • Molecular targeting of HPV oncogenes and oncogenic protein 

      Spillane, Cathy (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2010)
      Worldwide cervical cancer is the second most common cause of cancer related death in women. Over the last three decades high-risk HPV has been conclusively established as the major etiological factor in cervical cancer and ...
    • MyD88 : a key regulator of chemoresistance, differentiation and hypoxia resistance in cancer stem cells? 

      Cooke, Aoife (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2013)
      Ovarian cancer, the leading cause of gynaecologic cancer deaths in the western world is characterised by high rates of chemoresistant recurrence. While in primary cases, differentiation status of the tumour is considered ...
    • Non-coding RNA expression in cancer stem cell progenies derived from tumours +/-BRAF V600E mutation 

      Sommerville, Gary (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2013)
      Cancer has placed a huge burden on the global health system and rising rates in particular cancer types such as lung cancer and melanoma due to smoking and increased UV ray exposure respectively has highlighted the need ...
    • Platelet-cancer Cell Interactions induce PAI-1 Expression in an Ovarian Cancer Cell Line Model: Implications for the Metastasis of Epithelial Ovarian Cancer 

      Kelly, Tanya Elizabeth (Trinity College Dublin. School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology, 2021)
      This thesis encompasses an investigation into the function of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) - a serine protease inhibitor integral to coagulation and fibrinolysis that has been identified as both a key factor ...
    • Platinum and taxane chemoresistance mechanisms in ovarian cancer cells 

      Busschots, Steven (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2015)
      Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of death from a gynaecological malignancy, typically presenting at late stage due to difficult diagnosis and lack of suitable screening tools. The standard treatment of combination ...
    • Post-transcriptional Dysregulation by microRNAs is implicated in the Pathogenesis of Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumour [GIST] 

      Kelly, Lorna Catherine-Noelle (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2013)
      In a cohort of 73 GISTs including adult mutant, adult wild-type and paediatric cases miRNA expression was examined using TaqMan® Low Density Arrays (TLDAs), allowing the profiling of 667 miRNAs in a set of two (pool A and ...
    • Prognostic markers in thyroid neoplasia 

      Sheils, Orla (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2000)
      Prognosis in thyroid carcinoma is usually assessed on the basis of criteria, which include patient age and histological type, grade and stage of tumour. It is well recognised, however, that while occasional tumours with ...
    • Regulation of cancer stem cell differentiation by genes and microRNAs 

      Vencken, Sebastian (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2012)
      Since the discovery of a stem cell phenotype in cancer, specific tumour cells with this phenotype, often called cancer stem cells (CSCs), are now widely accepted as the progenitors of oncogenesis, proliferation, treatment ...
    • Targeting the prostate cancer metabolome with novel trojan horse compounds. 

      Bogue Edgerton, Laura Isobel (Trinity College Dublin. School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology, 2023)
      Prostate cancer (PCa) is the second most common cancer diagnosed in males worldwide, and the incidence of this disease is predicted to double globally by 2030. In Ireland, PCa accounts for nearly 16% of all invasive cancers ...
    • The expression and function of miRNAs in thyroid neoplasia 

      Aherne, Sinéad (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2010)
      Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine malignancy and accounts for the majority of endocrine cancer deaths each year. Carcinomas of the thyroid comprise a heterogeneous group of neoplasms with distinctive clinical and ...
    • The p16INK4A pathway in cervical cancer 

      Kehoe, Louise (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2010)
      The p16INK4A protein has been proposed as a biomarker in cervical cancer and pre-cancer. p16INK4A over expression is in contrast to that seen in other cancers, where locus deletion or mutation is the norm. p16INK4A is ...
    • The role of activated RET in papillary tumour morphogenesis 

      Flavin, Richard (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2011)
      RET/PTC rearrangements are initiating events in the development of a significant proportion of papillary thyroid carcinomas. Activated RET/PTC mutations are thought to be restricted to thyroid disease, but in this study ...
    • The role of MyD88 in embryonal carcinoma stem cells 

      Sulaiman, Gomaa M. A. (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2015)
      Tumour-initiating cells are known to share some properties with stem cells. These so called 'Cancer Stem Cells' (CSCs) are highly tumourigenic in the undifferentiated state, a property that is lost upon CSC differentiation. ...
    • The silencing of HPV16 Oncogenes using E6siRNAs 

      Soyingbe, Itunu Senami O. (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Medicine. Discipline of Histopathology & Morbid Anatomy, 2014)
      Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer worldwide and remains a rising cause of cancer deaths amongst women worldwide, particularly in low to mid-income countries. High risk HPV is the main etiological factor in ...