スポンサーリンク
Department Of Hematology And Clinical Oncology Fujita Health University School Of Medicine | 論文
- Allogeneic stem cell transplantation versus chemotherapy as post-remission therapy for intermediate or poor risk adult acute myeloid leukemia : results of the JALSG AML97 study
- BMI-1 Is Highly Expressed in M0-Subtype Acute Myeloid Leukemia
- Efficacy and Safety of Imatinib Mesylate for Patients in the First Chronic Phase of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia : Results of a Japanese Phase II Clinical Study
- Establishment of a Stroma-Dependent Human Acute Myelomonocytic Leukemia Cell Line, NAMO-2, with FLT3 Tandem Duplication
- Successful Pregnancy in a Patient with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia under Treatment with Imatinib
- Sustained activation of c-jun-N-terminal kinase plays a critical role in arsenic trioxide-induced cell apoptosis in multiple myeloma cell lines
- Mesenchymal Stem Cells Isolated from Frozen Bone Marrow Have Multilineage Potency
- Trough plasma concentration of imatinib reflects BCR-ABL kinase inhibitory activity and clinical response in chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia : A report from the BINGO study
- Mismatched human leukocyte antigen class II-restricted CD8^+ cytotoxic T cells may mediate selective graft-versus-leukemia effects following allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation
- Micafungin, a Novel Antifungal Agent, as Empirical Therapy in Acute Leukemia Patients with Febrile Neutropenia
- Heat denaturation increases the sensitivity of the cytomegalovirus loop-mediated isothermal amplification method
- Successful autologous stem cell transplantation for relapsed lymphoma with peripheral blood stem cells cryopreserved for ten years.
- Severe hepatitis associated with varicella zoster virus infection in a patient with diffuse large B cell lymphoma treated with rituximab-CHOP chemotherapy
- Chronic Myeloid Leukemia following Chemotherapy with 5'-deoxy-5-fluorouridine for Gastric Cancer
- Micafungin for empirical antifungal therapy in patients with febrile neutropenia: multicenter phase 2 study