Browsing by Author "Gül, Özen Öz"
Now showing items 1-2 of 2
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Disease-free survival and the prognostic factors affecting disease-free survival in patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma: a multicenter cohort study
Zuhur, Sayid Shafi; Öztürk, Beyza Olcay; Keskin, Ümran; Uysal, Serhat; Hacıoğlu, Aysa; Avcı, Uğur; Karslı, Seda; Andaç, Burak; Özbay, Ümit Nur; Kılınç, Faruk; Erol, Selvinaz; Çatak, Merve; Sodan, Hülyanur; Pekkolay, Zafer; Burhan, Şebnem; Akbaba, Gülhan; Ateş, Coşkun; Yorulmaz, Göknur; Tekin, Sakin; Topçu, Birol; Tuna, Mazhar Müslüm; Kadıoğlu, Pınar; Gönen, Mustafa Sait; Karaca, Züleyha; Çiftçi, Sema; Çelik, Mehmet; Güldiken, Sibel; Tüzün, Dilek; Altuntaş, Yüksel; Aktürk, Müjde; Niyazioğlu, Mutlu; Çınar, Neşe; Gül, Özen Öz; Kebapçı, Medine Nur; Akalın, Ayşen; Bayraktaroğlu, Taner; Elbüken, Gülşah (Springer, 2024)Purpose Despite several factors that may have been associated with poor disease-free survival (DFS) in patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), only a few studies have evaluated the prognostic factors affecting DFS ... -
What have we learned from Turkish familial hypercholesterolemia registries (A-HIT1 and A-HIT2)?
Kayıkcıoğlu, Meral; Tokgözoğlu, Lale; Doğan, Volkan; Ceyhan, Ceyhun; Tuncez, Abdullah; Kutlu, Merih; Onrat, Ersel; Alıcı, Gökhan; Akbulut, Mehmet; Çelik, Ahmet; Yeşilbursa, Dilek; Şahin, Tayfun; Sönmez, Alper; Özdoğan, Öner; Temizhan, Ahmet; Kılıç, Salih; Bayram, Fahri; Sabuncu, Tevfik; Coşkun, Fatma Yılmaz; Ildızlı, Müge; Duraklıoğlu, Murtaza Emre; Kırılmaz, Bahadır; Yılmaz, Mehmet Birhan; Yiğit, Zerrin; Yıldırım, Aytül Belgi; Gedikli, Ömer; Topçu, Selim; Oğuz, Aytekin; Demir, Mesut; Yenercağ, Mustafa; Yıldırır, Aylin; Demircan, Sabri; Yılmaz, Mehmet; Kaynar, Leyla Gül; Aktan, Melih; Durmuş, Rana Berru; Gökçe Cumali; Özcebe, Osman İlhami; Akyol, Tülay Karaağaç; Okutan, Harika; Sağ, Saim; Gül, Özen Öz; Salcıoğlu, Zafer; Altunkeser, Bülent Behlül; Kuku, İrfan; Yaşar, Hürriyet Yılmaz; Kurtoğlu, Erdal; Köse, Melis Demir; Demircioğlu, Sinan; Pekkolay, Zafer; İlhan, Osman; Can, Levent H. (Elsevier Ireland Ltd, 2018)Background and aims: Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is a common genetic disease of high-level cholesterol leading to premature atherosclerosis. One of the key aspects to overcome FH burden is the generation of largescale ...