Publications by authors named "J De Ceulaer"

The 5-year relative survival for patients with head and neck cancer, the seventh most common form of cancer worldwide, was reported as 67% in developed countries in the second decade of the new millennium. Although surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or combined treatment often elicits an initial satisfactory response, relapses are frequently observed within two years. Current surveillance methods, including clinical exams and imaging evaluations, have not unambiguously demonstrated a survival benefit, most probably due to a lack of sensitivity in detecting very early recurrence.

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Article Synopsis
  • Head and neck cancer (HNC) is a common type of cancer that affects the upper aerodigestive tract and has a low 5-year survival rate of 40-50% due to late diagnosis and recurrence.
  • Recent research has uncovered non-coding RNAs (like microRNAs and long non-coding RNAs) in the blood and saliva of HNC patients, suggesting they might be useful for early detection and diagnosis.
  • The review discusses how analyzing these circulating non-coding RNAs could significantly improve clinical decision-making and management of HNC.
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Cranial reconstruction after bone graft harvesting remains a challenge. A patient-specific implant (PSI) to guide harvesting and reconstruction was evaluated and compared with the use of a free-hand procedure with calcium phosphate cement (C). Patients were randomized to either the PSI or C group.

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Although CMOS fabrication has enabled a quick evolution in the design of high-density neural probes and neural-recording chips, the scaling and miniaturization of the complete data-acquisition systems has happened at a slower pace. This is mainly due to the complexity and the many requirements that change depending on the specific experimental settings. In essence, the fundamental challenge of a neural-recording system is getting the signals describing the largest possible set of neurons out of the brain and down to data storage for analysis.

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